Scientists express concern over health impacts, with another study finding particles in arteries
Microplastics have been found in every human placenta tested in a study, leaving the researchers worried about the potential health impacts on developing foetuses.
The scientists analysed 62 placental tissue samples and found the most common plastic detected was polyethylene, which is used to make plastic bags and bottles. A second study revealed microplastics in all 17 human arteries tested and suggested the particles may be linked to clogging of the blood vessels.
Microplastics have also recently been discovered in human blood and breast milk, indicating widespread contamination of people’s bodies. The impact on health is as yet unknown but microplastics have been shown to cause damage to human cells in the laboratory. The particles could lodge in tissue and cause inflammation, as air pollution particles do, or chemicals in the plastics could cause harm.
Huge amounts of plastic waste are dumped in the environment and microplastics have polluted the entire planet, from the summit of Mount Everest to the deepest oceans. People are known to consume the tiny particles via food and water as well as breathing them in, and they have been found in the faeces of babies and adults.
So will microplastics be the new leaded gasoline? Turning every kid into an idiot or an asshole or both?
This is where we find out that 4chan and Joe Rogan were caused by microplastics.
Probably just lots of cancers faster.
The real thing to watch for is if cancer rates just occur closer to retirement age anyways. Cause that could boost the economy.
Yup and we already see more colon cancer in young adults which makes sense if we’re eating microplastics. Obviously there’s a lot more that goes into it, but microplastics surely aren’t helping
Is there actual data saying that it increases cancer risk? Everything I’m finding says that we have no studies (or enough data) to say what the health impacts actually are.
Edit: I see some of the sources listed further down. Going through them.
One thing I did find while searching - plastics in bottled water are 20x higher than tap water. Yet another reason to quit buying so many damn plastic bottles
Turning? Not sure if you’ve been paying attention, but kids these days can’t even read.
That would be due to underfunded public schools and making Teaching jobs pay part time wages.
And ipads in every kids hand, given by inattentive parents, actively robbing them of “developing literacy” time.
Kids are supposed to be able to read prior to coming to elementary school. It’s expected, with minimal classroom time, by 1st grade, they’re reading full blown books. That’s fallen by the wayside.
Car tires are a major source of microplastics, making up 28% of the microplastics found in the ocean.
So yeah, cars fucking us over again. It seems to correlate to cancer and IBS, so not as much making us in to boomers more just killing us and making our lives less pleasant. Thanks again auto industry.
It is crazy that it has become this much of a problem and it feels like it is on almost no one’s radar. Is this even reversible at this point? I assume not, but that it can definitely get worse.
Good news, it is! Unlike other bad stuff like heavy metals, microplastics and PFAS are naturally eliminated from the body, just very slowly. Procedures like dialysis, or even just giving blood, can remove them more quickly.
This is true only if you don’t have a constant stream of plastic coming in, which you do.
No, it’s true that you will excrete microplastics even if you’re replacing them with fresh ones. If you want your total bodily microplastics level to go down, you will have to reduce your intake.
So giving blood doesn’t really remove the micro plastics so much as transfer them to someone else who is in rven worse shape than you are
Yeah but them needing blood is a bigger problem than having microplastics.
Also if it’s replacing blood lost, then they’ll probably break even on microplastics content.
For which part? I can link some studies, but you’d probably be more satisfied with the results you get by searching on your own.
What the article doesn’t explain is that this is a good trade off. Even though we have microplastics in our bodies in return we’re creating a ton of value for share holders.
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And in 90%+ of seabirds.