September 17, 2024
from
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The pollutants could be linked
to rise in neurodegenerative
diseases,
study suggests...
Researchers in Brazil have found
microplastics in human brain
tissue, a new study (Microplastics
in the Olfactory Bulb of the Human Brain) published on
Monday in the American Medical Association's journal JAMA reveals.
Microplastics pollution has emerged in recent
years as a growing environmental and health concern.
Tiny pieces of plastic measuring between 0.0055 and 0.025
millimeters (0.00021 to 0.00098 of an inch) in size were previously
detected in various human tissues and in the bloodstream.
Their presence in
the brain, however, up until now
has remained undocumented, the paper explains.
A team at Sao Paulo University medical school examined the brains of
15 deceased individuals aged 33 to 100 who had lived in Sao Paulo,
the country's biggest city.
Their research ran from February 2023 through to
May 2024.
The scientists focused on tissues of the
olfactory bulb, a small part of the brain that processes smell.
Microplastics were detected in the samples
taken from eight of the 15 individuals tested.
A total of 16 synthetic polymer particles and fibers were
identified, with polypropylene detected as the most common
polymer (43.8%).
The location in the brain led the researchers to
speculate that humans are breathing in the ubiquitous pollutants
through their nose.
"Propylene is everywhere, in furniture, rugs,
clothes," lead study author Dr Thais Mauad told NBC News.
"We know the place we are most exposed to
particles is indoors, because all of our homes are full of
plastic."
Polypropylene is also widely used in food packaging such as,
bottles, jars,
yogurt containers, and hot beverage cups.
The breakdown of single-use bottles and packaging
creates microplastic particles that consequently find their way into
the human body via the digestive tract or by inhaling.
The presence of microplastics in the olfactory bulb means it could
be a "potential pathway" for the particles to reach other parts of
the brain, researchers also found.
Given,
"the widespread environmental contamination
with plastics," the findings "should raise concern," the
researchers state, that microplastics could be contributing to
the "increasing prevalence of neurodegenerative diseases."
The first study to estimate human ingestion of
plastics, published in 2019,
suggested that the average human
ingested 50,000 microplastic particles every year...!
Another study
found that people on average could
be ingesting approximately five grams (0.18 oz) of plastic every
week, the equivalent in weight of a credit card...
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