Microplastics can contaminate organs, conference told
Source: RTE
An international conference at University College Dublin today has heard how microplastics can enter the human body and contaminate various organs. In recent years, scientists have found these particles in human placentas, blood and breast milk. Microplastics are tiny particles of plastic debris from plastic containers and products. The conference heard how fetal and neonatal periods of life are key moments in human development, when changes in physiological function can have an impact on life-long health.
Dr Junli Xu, Assistant Professor at UCD and Leader of the Microplastics Research Group, told today's meeting that microplastics are generally the size of less than 5 millimetres. She said that early life exposure is significant due to inhalation and ingestion pathways, including the use of plastic devices. Research also points to microplastics as environmental pollutants that get into the oceans and atmosphere and can contribute to climate change. Today's conference heard that while the world is full of plastic, there have been measures to end single use plastics and cut out plastics altogether.
Professor Emeritus Jacob de Boer, Professor of Environmental Chemistry and Toxicology at the Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, told the conference that microplastics are a serious concern. He said the levels of microplastics are around 100 times higher than the levels of other chemicals in the environment.
Prof de Boer said that dealing with plastics was mainly a management issue and was also a matter of behaviour, encouraging people not to throw away plastics and having governments ensure a clean environment. He told the conference that microplastics can enter the body through food items, including certain fruit, and can also be ingested via plastic water bottles, which he said contain a lot of microplastics. Prof de Boer emphasised that a significant amount of research work needs to be done to establish the exact toxic effects of microplastics on humans.
Read more: https://www.rte.ie/news/ireland/2024/0829/1467307-conference-microplastics/
Stargazer99
(2,926 posts)Make the industry that produced plastic clean up their mess instead of the common man risking death or sickness and paying for the garbage mess all over the globe? What? we are afraid of making business unhappy?
Lulu KC
(3,728 posts)Europe is better but never is the research done before the distribution. Tragic. And the scientific studies always end with "more research is required," because that is where they get their funding. But who will pay for it? Not business, that's for sure.
Don't get me started. Too late! This makes me INSANE.
JoseBalow
(4,884 posts)and I avoid single-use plastic products whenever possible. I often suggest to others that they should consider doing the same.
Backseat Driver
(4,622 posts)that manufactured and shipped plastic materials for industry out via a rail siding and trucks. We never visited inside the factory, but almost 50 years ago, I ran into/knew a lady and her family that was employed there about the time my children were born. Being out in the woods all day, doing what kids do--picking berries, catching tadpoles and crayfish in ponds, walking the rails, and playing in the dirt in every season was glorious, but was it toxic??? At the time, our parents were told by the Fire Department that if we ever heard lots of sirens approaching the place, we should run, not walk, and evacuate our home; parents and a brother are all now deceased, having never moved from the home purchased in 1952. Years later, the company was sold to a German firm and enlarged its local footprint. Since I was estranged from them for 30 years, then disinherited, the executrix and beneficiary of all three of their estates sold the home some time ago for reasons known only to her to a property management LLC of some sort.