Microplastics have been identified in the water we drink, the air we breathe and the food we eat – including seafood, table salt, honey, sugar, beer and tea. Sometimes the contamination occurs in the environment. Other times it’s the result of food processing, packaging and handling. More data is needed on microplastics in human foods such as land-animal products, cereals, grains, fruits, vegetables, beverages, spices, and oils and fats.

As equipment has advanced, scientists have identified smaller particles. They’ve found microplastics in our lungs, livers, kidneys, blood and reproductive organs. Microplastics have crossed protective barriers into our brains and hearts. While we eliminate some microplastics through urine, faeces and our lungs, many persist in our bodies for a long time.

  • @grue
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    1611 hours ago

    Plastic is the new asbestos.

  • @iAvicenna
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    27 hours ago

    but think of the shareholders in the oil industry!

  • @[email protected]
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    3214 hours ago

    We are doomed. We get it. Nothing will be done about it because oil and gas has so much money.

  • 👍Maximum Derek👍
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    2014 hours ago

    I had an eco prof who once said, “the world created humans because it couldn’t figure out plastic itself.” Now the world has plenty of plastic and it doesn’t need us anymore.

    • @[email protected]
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      411 hours ago

      I was thinking something similar. Like if a “God” exist they would be like a programmer that set us up and then let us run. Why? They wanted us to transform the world into a plastic hellscape. After that it would be “terrafromed” (plasti-formed?) for whatever will be the evolutionary descendants of those bacteria that are eating the microplastics in the Pacific Garbage patch.

    • @gedaliyahOPM
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      614 hours ago

      I wish the title weren’t so clickbaity… the article is actually very good and written by a top researcher in the field.

  • @Paddzr
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    312 hours ago

    Can someone explain to me like I’m 10 years old why micro plastics are bad and what will happen to my body?

    • @iAvicenna
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      37 hours ago

      I feel it will likely be similar to asking why asbestos was bad but hundred years ago.

    • comador
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      1312 hours ago

      Micros plastics in the body screw with your organs and hormone production, which can lead to things as mild as lower energy levels and increased obesity or as extreme as diabetes, infertility and even cancer.

    • @[email protected]
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      711 hours ago

      No, but only cause we are just starting to notice the build up. Think about it this way. There’s something building up in our body that doesn’t have a purpose other than getting in the way other functions.

      That is the least destructive it will be to our bodies. Functions will be worse because plastic is taking the place of valuable nutrients or microbotical gut biome. Or it’s just in the way and that brain to cells message take a bit longer. Butterfly effect stuff all over your body on a micro level.

      We can’t even really run proper comparisons because we don’t have a control group. Literally every living creature has this build up. The only way someone will have less micro plastics is if they give birth. The act of growing human cells moves some plastic from the mother to the baby. It’s all a guess, but of course that’s science. Now is the “fun” part of proving what theories are true…somehow.