Abstract

The effect of fluoride ingestion on plasma and urinary cyclic AMP levels was studied in healthy volunteers, children undergoing prophylactic fluoride treatment and in rats. In the first series of experiments fluoride ingestion led to a 20-fold increase in plasma fluoride concentration, which was unrelated to changes in plasma cyclic AMP. The only significant effect on plasma cyclic AMP occurred prior to fluoride, an effect attributed to stress. In the second series performed in children increases in urinary F- of up to 200-fold were associated with slight but nonsignificant changes in cyclic AMP excretion. In rat experiments the blood sampling procedure was associated with a rise in plasma cyclic AMP. When this was prevented by pretreatment with propranolol (3 mg/kg), the effect of fluoride (50 ppm in the drinking water) was tested. A fall in urine production was not associated with any change in cyclic AMP excretion or in nephrogenic cyclic AMP. It is concluded that if fluoride alters cyclic AMP in rats and man the effect is small and easily masked by other factors such as catecholamine release following stress.

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