Scottish Daily Mail

How plastic’s POLLUTING YOUR BODY

It’s been found in our digestive systems and now even placentas. With each of us ingesting over 100,000 particles a year, how worried should we be?

- By FIONA MacRAE

When we think of the devastatin­g toll that plastic pollution can have, it is usually images of turtles caught in single-use bags or piles of plastic bottles in landfill that we conjure up — for most of us, it is an environmen­tal problem.

But there is emerging evidence that plastic waste could become a health issue, too. The problem lies with plastic as it breaks down into tiny particles — so-called microplast­ics, which are 5mm in length (the size of a lentil), or less.

These tiny particles are everywhere: they are produced from the breakdown of bags and bottles, the wear and tear of the soles on our shoes as we walk, and the tyres on our cars as we drive.

even putting on a load of laundry generates hundreds of thousands of microplast­ic fibres (from fabrics such as nylon, acrylic and polyester).

What’s more, mask wearing may increase our exposure, says Alex McGoran, a microplast­ics researcher at Royal holloway, University of London and the natural history Museum. ‘Single-use face masks likely shed microplast­ic fibres into the air around us. But the benefit we gain from wearing them probably outweighs the cons of potential microfibre inhalation.’

These tiny particles are in our water, food and on surfaces we touch — and we are only just understand­ing their impact.

While our bodies are thought to clear some of the microplast­ics that build up inside us, according to a 2018 review by King’s College London, newer research suggests it’s possible for microplast­ics to pass from the airway or gut into the blood and to our organs. In theory, the plastic could then cause damaging inflammati­on or leach harmful chemicals.

In one of the latest studies, Italian scientists found microplast­ics in human placentas for the first time, which could affect foetal health and developmen­t.

The findings, published last month in the journal environmen­t Internatio­nal, led the researcher­s to suggest women are giving birth to ‘cyborg babies’ — and British experts now warn that while we don’t know the exact impact this plastic can have, the fact it makes it to the placenta is less than reassuring. As Alex McGoran explains, microplast­ics are everywhere: ‘We hear about fish with plastic in them and the perception is that most of the microplast­ics we consume come from seafood.

‘But we are surrounded by plastic. For instance, at home, you might be walking on an artificial carpet, closing curtains made from polyester and sitting on a chair with an artificial cushion — all of these shed fibres into the air which we can then breathe in.’

A2018 study from heriotWatt and Plymouth universiti­es calculated that the average Briton will swallow up to 68,415 pieces of microplast­ic a year from dust.

And our diets (microplast­ics have been detected in everything from beer to sea salt and honey) provide another 52,000 or so of these particles per year, according to the journal environmen­tal Science & Technology in 2019.

But what, if anything, could be the consequenc­es of plastic particles building up in our bodies?

In a 2019 study by the University Medical Centre in Utrecht, scientists wanted to investigat­e how human immune cells deal with microplast­ics. They put the cells in a petri dish with microplast­ics and found that while our immune cells recognised and engulfed the plastic particles, they died as a result. This cell death can be linked with potentiall­y harmful inflammati­on. Research is ongoing to see if this happens in animals and humans.

Meanwhile, there are concerns that some microplast­ics are small enough to get into our bloodstrea­m and organs.

A 2018 study analysed stool samples from eight people from europe, Japan and Russia and found that plastics, including polypropyl­ene (commonly used in food containers and packaging) and polyethyle­ne terephthal­ate (a polyester used in clothing and food packaging), were present in human stools, showing that microplast­ics could get through the human gastrointe­stinal tract.

Plastic in the gut could affect the digestive system’s immune response or aid the transfer of chemicals and pathogens, the researcher­s said, adding that this may have implicatio­ns for ‘patients with gastrointe­stinal diseases’.

In a 2018 animal study in the journal environmen­tal Science & Technology, Richard Thompson, a marine biologist at the University of Plymouth, who first coined the term microplast­ics in 2004, showed pieces of plastic can pass from the gut into the circulator­y system.

he told Good health: ‘If we have shown in scallops that small pieces can pass from the gut to the circulator­y system, it’s likely that could occur with humans, too. But that doesn’t necessaril­y tell you it is harmful.’ In the recent Italian study, 12 plastic pieces were detected in four placentas that were donated after birth.

Three of these pieces were recognised as polypropyl­ene, while the other pieces appeared to be plastic particles from ‘man-made coatings, paints, adhesives, plasters and cosmetics’.

The women had healthy pregnancie­s but the authors said that, given the crucial role of the placenta, the ‘presence of plastic particles is of great concern’.

no details were given of the babies’ health, but Charles Kingsland, a professor of reproducti­ve medicine at edge hill University in Lancashire, says the microplast­ics could ‘poison the child’ or reduce its supply of oxygen, leading to some babies being stillborn or underweigh­t.

‘We must be more aware of the potential damage we are doing, not only to the environmen­t, but also to human health and the health of unborn babies,’ he says.

ThIS isn’t the first time British experts have raised concerns over the impact of microplast­ics. In a 2019 report, the Royal Society analysed studies from the past decade and set out three ways microplast­ics may affect animal — and so, human — health.

The first is in the gut. There are concerns microplast­ics could disrupt the microbiome, the community of bugs that help us digest food and regulate our immune systems. Microplast­ics could also potentiall­y damage cells in the gut, ‘possibly increasing the risk of cancer’, it said.

The second is harm from chemicals that are used to make plastic. For instance, bisphenol A, which is found in the plastic linings of tin cans, can interfere with hormones and has been linked to ills in animals, including reduced fertility, problems with brain and bone developmen­t and cancer.

Finally, the Royal Society raised concerns that microplast­ics may be carrying other poisonous chemicals into the body. This is because once in the water, they act as a magnet for insecticid­es and other potentiall­y toxic substances and become coated in them. harmful bacteria may also hitch a ride this way, the report warns. Previous research has found bacteria that can cause wound infections and gastroente­ritis living on the surface of microplast­ics. however, a review carried out for the european Commission in 2019 cautioned that animal studies tend to use concentrat­ions of microplast­ics that are much higher than those found in real life.

The Royal Society report said: ‘There is evidence demonstrat­ing the presence of microplast­ics . . . in humans and the human diet.’ But it added that the ‘human digestive system is effective at eliminatin­g microplast­ics, likely disposing of more than 90 per cent of ingested microplast­ics’, before concluding that there is ‘little evidence as yet that microplast­ics do harm to humans’.

So while no conclusive link can be made with the risk to human health yet, it makes sense to take steps to reduce plastic pollution.

For example, wearing reusable masks rather than single-use ones, drinking tap water rather than bottled water, and putting laundry in special bags that catch plastic fibres produced while washing. ‘And before you throw clothes away, think about whether you want to dispose of them just yet or make them last a little bit longer,’ says Alex McGoran.

‘Plastic pollution is everywhere,’ she adds. ‘While it’s too early to say whether it is harming human health, the damage to the environmen­t can’t be denied.’

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TURN THE TIDE ON PLASTIC

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