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Study reveals first signs that nanoplastics harm human health

2024-03-08T10:28:31.114Z

Highlights: Study reveals first signs that nanoplastics harm human health. Patients with microscopic plastics in their arteries multiply their risk of heart attack, stroke and death by 4.5. Every year, nearly 400 million tons of plastics are produced each year and are used in products that are everywhere. In this way, it is possible to identify the different types of particles that can accumulate in the body and what measures could be taken to prevent them from arriving in the first place. In the last decades, when the population's exposure to plastics has increased, the prevalence of cardiovascular diseases has decreased.


Patients with microscopic plastics in their arteries multiply their risk of heart attack, stroke and death by 4.5


In recent years, it has been seen that nanoplastics can reach breast milk and the placenta, blood plasma or accumulate inside cells.

Although some animal studies suggested that these ubiquitous particles could have health effects, there was a lack of analysis in humans that had observed this link.

This has changed after the publication of an article this week in the

New England Journal of Medicine

.

A team led by Raffaele Marfella, from the University of Campania, in Italy, explains in their study how they analyzed 257 patients who went to three hospitals in the Naples region to undergo a surgical procedure to treat the accumulation of atherosclerotic plaque in the carotid artery, in the neck.

This buildup can cause clogged arteries, which increases the risk of cardiovascular problems.

Those responsible for the study took samples of these plates and analyzed the presence of micro and nanoplastics.

Their results show that 58% of the patients had traces of these plastic particles and, after monitoring those who had and those who did not, they observed that, in those who had plastic, the accumulated risk of dying from any cause , heart attack and stroke multiplied by 4.5.

More information

They find for the first time a relationship between nanoplastics in the body and risk of disease

“It is a conclusive result and opens a new vision about the contaminants to which we are exposed and do not see,” says Jaume Marrugat, a researcher at the Hospital del Mar Medical Research Institute in Barcelona, ​​​​who did not participate in the study.

Although the results do not allow us to establish a cause and effect link, there are clear factors that point in that direction.

Markers of inflammation, which show the body's response to what it considers a threat and which increases the risk of heart disease, were higher in people with nanoplastics in the carotid.

“This study highlights the importance of inflammation in atherosclerosis, because we are used to thinking about cholesterol or hypertension as risk factors that produce this deterioration, but they are all inflammatory processes, like the one seen produced by nanoplastics,” points out Enrique Gutiérrez, cardiologist at the Gregorio Marañón University Hospital in Madrid.

Furthermore, “the carotid is an artery and the heart is also irrigated by arteries, the coronary arteries, so we can extrapolate that what happens in the carotid will also happen in the coronary artery,” concludes Marrugat.

Other studies have observed that people who work exposed to plastic pollution have a higher risk of suffering from cardiovascular diseases.

In animal models, it had also been seen how nanoplastics, after being ingested or inhaled, are easily distributed throughout the body through the bloodstream and accumulate in well-watered organs, including the heart.

It is a study with a relatively small number of patients and the authors themselves recognize the possibility of a risk of contamination in the samples used.

But, if confirmed, the results are worrying.

Every year, nearly 400 million tons of plastics are produced each year and are used in products that are everywhere.

A recent study published in the journal

PNAS

showed that around a quarter of a million plastic nanoparticles could be found in each one-liter plastic bottle.

The particles that are released from a water bottle when it is heated or when the cap is opened and closed can also continue to divide to almost infinity.

The team led by Marfella observed that most of the particles detected were below 200 nanometers and that the smaller the size, the easier it was to colonize organs or even cells.

In a relatively new field of study, there are still important unknowns.

The researchers saw no differences in the presence of nanoplastics in patients living in different regions.

“We do not have any hypotheses at this time [about why some patients accumulate nanoplastics in their atheroma plaques and others do not], but we are preparing larger studies to explore the association between exposure to plastics and the accumulation of micro- and nanoplastics in the tissues,” says Francesco Prattichizzo, IRCCS MultiMedica researcher and co-author of the study.

These future studies will also serve to understand the weight of nanoplastics compared to other risk factors.

As the authors of the study comment, during the last decades, at a time when the population's exposure to plastics has increased greatly, the prevalence of cardiovascular diseases has decreased.

New analysis techniques have made it possible to begin to detect the presence of plastics in places where it was previously unthinkable and it is now possible to identify the different types of particles that can accumulate in the body.

In this way, it will be possible to know where they arrive from, the different risks posed by each type of particle and what preventive measures can be established in the face of what could be a global health problem, if results such as those published by the Italian team are confirmed.

If microplastics and nanoplastics pose a significant health problem, the use of a material that can remain in the environment for centuries, which, in most cases, has a single use and which is only recycled in one place, must be re-evaluated. 9%.

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Source: elparis

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