2024-02-23 14:27:25
February 23, 2024
Plastic is everywhere. Even in the human placenta, an organ which ensures exchanges between the mother and the fetus… This is what a team of researchers from the University of New Mexico has just shown, which has even identified the most common plastic in placental tissue: polyethylene, the plastic with which bags and bottles are made.
Water, milk, shellfish, fruits, vegetables… microplastics are omnipresent in what we consume. At what levels are they present in our body? Researchers from the University of New Mexico (United States) have tested a new tool capable of measuring the presence of these substances in the human placenta, this organ which allows exchanges between the mother and the fetus.
Published on February 17, 2024 in the journal Toxicological Sciences, the results confirm that all the placenta samples tested were contaminated with plastic microparticles. Across the 62 placenta samples, concentrations ranged from 6.5 to 790 micrograms of plastic per gram of tissue. “If we see effects on the placenta, that means the life of all mammals on this earth might be affected,” says Professor Matthew Camden, who led the study.
Polyethylene, PVC, nylon…
Using a new technique, scientists, in partnership with researchers at the University of Oklahoma, have successfully isolated plastics from placental tissue. They then heated them to capture and analyze the gas emissions.
Polyethylene, used to make plastic bags and bottles, was the most common plastic (54%), followed by polyvinyl chloride, also known as PVC and nylon. Respectively 10% of plastics found. Nine other polymers were also present in the samples studied.
What regarding other organs, while the placenta has a very short lifespan. It begins to develop one month following the start of pregnancy and its growth lasts only eight months. “Plastics accumulate over much longer periods in other organs of the body,” points out the scientist.
Contemporary diseases explained by the omnipresence of plastic?
And if plastics are considered biologically inert, some microparticles would be small enough to pass through cell membranes. So, what exactly are their effects on health? For Prof. Camden“the increasing concentration of microplastics in human tissues might explain the surprising increase in certain health problems, such as inflammatory bowel disease and colon cancer in people under 50, as well as the decline sperm count. Camden and his team are continuing their work to try to answer these questions as the plastic crisis only worsens.
The manufacturing and use of plastics has been growing exponentially for decades. As a reminder, industrial plastic was born in 1907 with Bakelite; it has been used extensively since the second half of the 20th century. According to the OECD, between 2000 and 2019, plastic production doubled to reach 460 million tonnes, the same year 353 million tonnes of plastic waste were generated. The particles break down into even smaller particles and so on. “We absorb it by ingestion, but also by inhalation. It affects us, humans, but also all animals and plants,” notes Marcus Garcia, who works with Professor Camden.
Source : Toxicological Sciences, OCDE
Written by: Dorothée Duchemin – Edited by Emmanuel Ducreuzet
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