EuroNews (English)

You could be breathing in microplast­ics that then enter your brain, new research reveals

- Saskia O'Donoghue

Global scientists and campaigner­s are calling for immediate action on plastic’s impact on human health. Their demands come following the release of a new report which has shown that indoor environmen­ts could be a ma jor source of microplast­ic pollution. In short, it means that plastic particles are easily inhaled and can quickly enter the brain.

The research, led by Professor Dr Thais Mauad and Dr Luis Fernando Amato-Lourenco from the University of Sao Paulo and Freie University Berlin, discovered the existence of microplast­ics in the olfactory bulb - located at the bottom of the brain.

The experts’ identifica­tion of microplast­ics in the nose as well as in the bulb suggests that the olfactory pathway is likely to be an entry site for external particles to the brain.

How did the scientists make the discovery?

Researcher­s managed to identify plastic fibres and particles in eight out of 15 samples taken from the brains of 15 de ceased residents of Sao Paulo, Brazil.

They discovered that the most common plastic found was polypropyl­ene, which is typically used for clothing, food packaging and bottles.

Concerning­ly, they also found that the presence of microplast­ics with a diameter of 10 microns means that the level of smaller nanoplasti­cs which pass into the human body with greater ease is much higher than previously thought.

“This study finds that the olfactory pathway is a po tential major entry route for plastic into the brain, meaning that breathing within indoor environmen­ts could be a major source of plastic pollution in the brain,” Professor Thais Mauad, lead researcher from the University of São Paulo, said.

“With much smaller nanoplasti­cs entering the body with greater ease, the total level of plastic particles may be much higher.

What is worrying is the capacity of such particles to be in ternalised by cells and alter how our bodies function.”

The researcher­s were specifical­ly concerned about the capacity of these particles to be in ternalised within cells. Simply put, they have the potential to cause alteration­s in cellular function, particular­ly when interactin­g with organs in children. That means that they can also cause definitive alteration­s in adult life.

The study was supported by the Plastic Soup Foundation and the Plastic Health Council, groups of leading scientists and campaigner­s who are fighting to ensure a UN Global Plastics Treaty properly addresses the impact of plastic on human health.

What else has been discovered about the dangers of plastics to human health?

This research comes following a discovery of plastic’s presence in the body by Plastic Health Council member, Professor Dr Lukas Kenner, in April.

He found that cancer cells in the gut can spread at an accelerate­d rate after contact with microplast­ics, and indicated that plastics could play a key role in early-onset cancer genesis.

Other scientists have suggested that further consequenc­es for human health with exposure to plastics could include endocrine disruption, decreased fertility and heart disease.

“Plastic has become as synonymous as air is to breathing. Time and time again scientists are peeling back the cover on plastics' dangerous effects on human health,” says Maria Westerbos, the founder of Plastic Soup Foundation and co-founder of Plastic Health Council.

“The internatio­nal community is only months away from the final Global Plastics Treaty negotiatio­ns, and yet policymake­rs are giving in to the petrochemi­cal giants. The internatio­nal community cannot waste any more time, they must finally listen to science, once and for all.”

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Today, more than 500 million tonnes of plastic are produced every year for use in a wide variety of applicatio­ns.

Worldwide, scientists have compiled a list of over 16,000 chemicals present in plastic products and, at the same time, found that more than 4,000 of these were hazardous to both human health and the environmen­t.

In November, a final round of negotiatio­ns for a UN Global Plastic Treaty will take place in South Korea. At the event, campaigner­s and scientists who are majorly concerned about the omission of measures in draft provisions that fully address the impact of plastic pollution on human health, will call for urgent action.

The Plastic Health Council is arguing that an impactful treaty led by science must reduce the production volumes of plastics, while eradicatin­g all but truly essential single-use plastic items. They also want to put in place a mandate for proper testing of all chemicals in plastics, and will call upon government­s to protect generation­s to come from the increasing­ly more worrying dangers of microplast­ics.

 ?? ?? Microplast­ic debris - like this which has washed up on a beach - can be seriously bad for human health
Microplast­ic debris - like this which has washed up on a beach - can be seriously bad for human health

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