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. 2004 Dec;81(12):638-40.
doi: 10.4314/eamj.v81i12.9250.

Clinical and radiological prevalence of skeletal fluorosis among retired employees of Wonji-Shoa sugar estate in Ethiopia

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Clinical and radiological prevalence of skeletal fluorosis among retired employees of Wonji-Shoa sugar estate in Ethiopia

G Assefa et al. East Afr Med J. 2004 Dec.

Abstract

Objective: To study the clinical and radiological prevalence of skeletal fluorosis among the retired employees of Wonji-Shoa sugar estate.

Design: Retrospective and cross-sectional study.

Setting: Wonji-Shoa sugar estate, an agro-industrial estate located in the Ethiopian Rift Valley.

Subjects: Two hundred and sixty three employees of the estate who retired between 1995 and 1996.

Main outcome measures: Clinical evidence of impaired squatting, neck and lumbar mobility, kyphosis, and X-ray evidence of fluorosis.

Results: Skeletal fluorosis was more evident among the males (p<0.05), and the prevalence was higher among the factory and the agricultural workers than among the administrative workers (p<0.05). Clinical prevalence was 20% versus the radiological prevalence of 70.3%, indicating that many cases were asymptomatic. Impaired neck and lumbar mobility and impaired squatting significantly agreed with the radiological diagnosis (p<0.05) while kyphosis was not.

Conclusion: Further clinical and epidemiological studies are suggested and strengthening of the existing defluoridation programmes within the area is recommended.

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