Decades-old Baby
Teeth give bite to Fallout Study
Scientists seek effects of nuclear bomb tests on lifelong health
Stephanie Simon / LA Times 26nov01
St. Louis -- The study was designed to stir alarm, and did it ever: As the United States tested nuclear bombs with scores of explosions in Nevada, researchers four states away in the nation's heartland found radioactive fallout in local kids' teeth.
No one knew at the time how the radiation might affect the children's health. No one tried to find out. The study simply documented that as nuclear tests intensified through the late 1950s and early 1960s, kids were absorbing ever more radiation. Its goal was to help lobby for an end to above-ground tests.
The strategy worked. The St. Louis Baby Tooth Survey collected almost 300, 000 teeth -- most from the St. Louis area, a hot spot for fallout from the tests. And the findings helped build public pressure for the ban on atmospheric atom bomb tests that President John F. Kennedy signed in 1963.
Now researchers hope to revive the tooth study -- and the public activism it sparked -- by exploring whether the fallout those Cold War kids absorbed has caused health problems over the years.
The follow-up is possible because of a chance discovery. Workers cleaning out an old ammunition bunker at Washington University in May came across a cache of small envelopes secured with rusty paper clips. Inside were 85,000 baby teeth left over from the 1960s, each matched with a card identifying the donor.
The university was about to throw them out when a biology professor recommended donating the teeth to the Radiation and Public Health Project, a private research group in New York. Elated, scientists from the radiation project began an effort this month to track down donors so they can collect 40 years of health data.
Project director Jay M. Gould calls the opportunity "priceless."
But the study's splashy revival -- featured on CNN and National Public Radio and in the St. Louis Post-Dispatch -- has raised the hackles of some scientists.
"The short story? It's unabashed junk science," said Steve Musolino, a health physicist specializing in radiation at Brookhaven National Laboratory in New York. "It's a study designed to scare people. It will never be able to reveal anything conclusive."
Critics say there's no way to compare the tooth donors' health with that of contemporaries who did not absorb nuclear fallout. There's also no way to measure other sources of radiation the donors might have been exposed to over the years -- from medical procedures, perhaps.
Gould insists he will be able to draw valid conclusions. He plans to divide his subjects into three groups according to how much radioactive contamination is found in their decades-old baby teeth. He will then compare health statistics from each group to determine, for instance, whether those with the most contaminated teeth have suffered more cancer.
In the first five days after Gould went public with his plans, he received more than 1,000 e-mails from people who remember contributing their teeth and who are willing to answer health questionnaires. "The interest has been quite extraordinary," Gould said. "We're flabbergasted."
One volunteer is Julie Fleck, 39, of St. Louis, who remembers that when she put her baby teeth under her pillow as a kid, the tooth fairy would leave her a quarter but would not take the tooth. "Our teeth are going to a study," her mom would explain, "and our tooth fairy is smart enough to know that." Fleck remembers too the buttons she got as a thank you for each donation: They featured a cartoon kid with a gap in his smile, and the boast: "I gave my tooth to science."
Her older brother, Doug Collinger, is willing to participate, but he's doubtful that strontium 90, the radioactive byproduct of nuclear fission, in his baby teeth can be linked to any specific health risk. "Considering all the other pollutants in the atmosphere, I'm not sure it was any worse than what we breathe today."
The original Baby Tooth Survey was a groundbreaking effort. It marked one of the first times the public mobilized en masse to aid scientific research. The hoopla spread far; researchers received baby teeth from children around the world, some in envelopes addressed to "Tooth Fairy, St. Louis."
Most teeth from remote locales were laid aside, however, to focus on kids from St. Louis. Although the bomb tests were conducted in Nevada, wind patterns pushed much of the byproducts here, where it fell to the ground with the rain. Animals grazing on that ground would absorb radioactive elements, which could be passed to people consuming local milk or meat.
The high levels of strontium 90 in St. Louis affected mostly fetuses, whose fast-growing bones and teeth readily absorbed any radioactive elements their mothers had ingested through contaminated food.
Thus, the Baby Tooth Survey found the levels of strontium 90 in kids' teeth varied dramatically by birth year.
Children born in 1950, when there had been just a few small-scale atom bomb tests, had barely perceptible levels of the element in their teeth. By 1957, when powerful hydrogen bomb tests were under way, they averaged 2.6 picocuries of strontium 90 per gram of dental calcium.
That ratio more than quadrupled for babies born in 1964, when atmospheric testing had ceased but remnant fallout was at its peak over St. Louis, said Joseph Mangano, an epidemiologist with the Radiation and Public Health Project.
"We really thought we were making a big contribution to science," said Sandy Rosen, 69, who sent her four children's baby teeth to the project. "We never forgot about it."
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