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Medicine Science

Stroke Patients Have High Levels of Microplastics Clogging Their Arteries, Researchers Find 46

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Business Insider: There is some microplastics in normal, healthy arteries," Dr. Ross Clark, a University of New Mexico medical researcher who led the study, told Business Insider before he presented his findings at the meeting of the American Heart Association in Baltimore on Tuesday. "But the amount that's there when they become diseased -- and become diseased with symptoms -- is really, really different," Clark said. Clark and his team measured microplastics and nanoplastics in the dangerous, fatty plaque that can build up in arteries, block blood flow, and cause strokes or heart attacks. Compared to the walls of healthy plaque-free arteries, plaque buildup had 16 times more plastic -- just in the people who didn't have symptoms. In people who had experienced stroke, mini-stroke, or vision loss, the plaque had 51 times more plastic. [...]

To investigate why, Clark studied samples from 48 people's carotid arteries -- the pair of superhighways in your neck that channel blood to your brain. The difference in plastic quantities surprised him, but his team found another concerning trend, too. Cells in the plaque with lots of plastic showed different gene activity than those with low plastic. In the high-plastic environment, one group of immune cells had switched off a gene that's associated with turning off inflammation. Clark's team also found genetic differences in a group of stem cells thought to help prevent heart attacks and strokes by reducing inflammation and stabilizing plaque. "Could it be that microplastics are somehow altering their gene expression?" Clark said. He added that there's "lots more research needed to fully establish that, but at least it gives us a hint as to where to look."

Ross, who specializes in the genetic mechanisms behind disease, agreed that more research is needed, but added that she thinks "these plastics are doing something with these plaques." Tracking microplastics in the human body is a new scientific endeavor as of the last couple years. It's not perfect. Clark's team heated the plaque samples to more than 1,000 degrees Fahrenheit to vaporize plastic polymers and break them down into smaller organic molecules, which can be identified and measured by their mass and other properties. Unfortunately, the lipids in plaque can break down into chemicals that look very similar to polyethylene, the most common plastic found in everything from plastic bags to car parts. "Because we know about this problem, we've taken a lot of steps to remove those lipids and confirm their removal, so that we're sure we're measuring polyethylene," Clark said. Still, he added, "it's a big limitation, and it should be acknowledged that these types of methodologies are continuously improving."
"Almost all of what we know about microplastics in the human body, no matter where you look, can be summed up as: It's there, and we need to study further as to what it's doing, if anything," Clark said.

Stroke Patients Have High Levels of Microplastics Clogging Their Arteries, Researchers Find

Comments Filter:
  • by hdyoung ( 5182939 ) on Wednesday April 23, 2025 @11:55PM (#65327027)
    Vaporization at high temps of a bulk bio sample followed by identification of molecular fragments? So were talking some sort of hot energetic breakdown followed by mass spec. And theyre trying to figure out which polyethylene fragments are from the microplastics? I straight-up dont believe they can do it even without seeing their data. Polyethylene is one of the simplest structures in the universe, and a bio-soup at those temps is gonna form tons of short hydrocarbon chains. Separating out the microplastic-derived chains from the OTHER hydrocarbon chains I just dont believe its possible. And sure enough it hasnt been peer reviewed yet. I would believe electron microscopy data that actually counts the microplastic fragments. That would be convincing.
    • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

      "Because we know about this problem, we've taken a lot of steps to remove those lipids and confirm their removal, so that we're sure we're measuring polyethylene,"

      It's almost like scientists are smart and recognize issues that might interfere with a measurement and take steps to mitigate them.

      And it's definitely like you stopped reading part way through the summary and assumed you were smarter than the scientist doing the research.

      • I read the whole post and then pecked around for the manuscript but didnt find it. I clicked several times but stopped when I found it hadnt been peer reviewed yet. As I said, based on my own understanding of those methods, Im skeptical that separating out the plastics signal from the biosoup is even possible by a mass spec or chromatography method (probably even worse). I also offered a plausible method that I would consider more convincing. Im not trying to downplay the problems that plastics can cause. B
    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      by n2hightech ( 1170183 )
      I think this is total BS. These guys are trying to blame the plastics industry for all kinds of diseases so they can file massive class action lawsuits to drive the plastics industry out of business. Just like the talcum powder and cancer suits. Not sure who is financing these studies but it's basically find an industry that is profitable and use lawfair to extract as much money out of it as you can using gullible juries and bogus science. What I want to know is how does plastic get into the body? I have n
      • My gut can do it. You just need to try harder.

      • by kackle ( 910159 )
        The gut barrier is supposedly about one cell thick and can be inflamed by irritants. Once inflamed, it malfunctions, allowing abnormal particles to get through to the blood. I'm not an expert but it seems logical.
  • by MacMann ( 7518492 ) on Thursday April 24, 2025 @12:27AM (#65327041)

    Oh, wait, this isn't evidence of microplastics causing harm.

    What exactly the plastics are doing in there, if anything, remains a mystery. The new study offers some possible clues, though.

    They found microplastics in the material that clogged arteries, but then we find microplastics in a lot of tissues in the human body. They made a claim of something like many people having a "spoonful" of plastics in their brains, or something like that, don't sue me if I didn't get that quite right as it won't go far. If there was a spoonful of sand in people's brains then would we be able to notice any reduction in cognitive ability? Increased risk of strokes or other health problem? I can recall someone having so much fluid in their skull that it reduced the volume of their brain to something like 1/3rd the normal volume and nobody suspected much until the patient died and they did an autopsy. The human brain is quite resilient.

    It would be helpful to know how much plastics are found in the human body compared to other foreign objects. Foreign objects like sand, pollen, insects and parts of dead insects, or whatever small little bits of stuff that end up in what we eat, drink, and breathe. Without that comparison it is difficult to gauge what it means to have a "spoonful" of plastics in my brain as I suspect it is possible that after growing up on a dairy farm I've breathed in a lot of dust and other crap that has accumulated in between my ears. All it might mean to find elevated levels of plastics in the those that had strokes is that such people lived lives with exposure to all kinds of chemicals and such that could impact health. Maybe they ate a lot of crap food that was packaged in plastics. Maybe the worked in some kind of factory where plastic dust would be kicked up by machines that also produced noise, EM fields, or other stressors on the body that could impact health long term.

    I still don't know why microplastics should be a concern. Is this a field that we should study? I would guess so. That doesn't mean we need to induce fear of plastics on people with "news" like that being presented. This is click bait and fear mongering than any attempt to inform, and I'm growing tired of it.

    • by MDMurphy ( 208495 ) on Thursday April 24, 2025 @02:05AM (#65327123)
      It reminds me of homeopathy. Wild claims are made for the effect of compounds impossible or near impossible to detect. It seems that every study regarding microplastics has dire warnings only to mention at the end "we don't know if there's any effect, we need to study more". This sounds to me that the ability to detect minuscule amounts of a substance has outdistanced the ability to determine what those amounts mean.

      There may very well be dangers due to microplastics, but most of these studies sound to me like loud warnings intended to get additional funding. All the results might be completely accurate, but the sensational warnings always are followed by "We just don't know,".

      It also reminds me of wild claims about other studies, where you have to dig deep to find that the conclusions were only made "on mice."
      • Jesus,

        They checked healthy arteries.
        They checked diseased (clogged) arteries and found 16x the level of microplastics of the healthy arteries
        They checked arteries of stroke victims and found 51x the level of the healthy arteries, 3x the level in the clogged arteries.

        And this is homeopathy?

        Microplastics aren't at all hard to detect with the right equipment, they're just hard to see without. It's like cholera in early Victorian times, we're at the level of knowing there's something but not understanding exact

        • by DarkOx ( 621550 )

          I wish the for public consumption level research would more clearly clearly state if the concern is micro-plastics or nano-plastics, which EPA and some other treat as a subset of micro-plastic.

          A micro plastic can be as a big as 5mm; that certainly inst getting into an artery (though normal means anyway) let alone anyone's brain. Even down to fractions like 10ths of a millimeter I'd be surprised if bio-accumulation is really a problem. However there are a lot of materials like synthetic fabrics that readil

    • Yes, and a lot of smokers live long, with their tarry lungs evident only at the autopsy. Yet, that smoking causes cancer was established by correlational studies, not double-blind medical trials.

      The evidence these researchers have seems just as strong... the equivalent of a few smoking guns.

    • I couldn't help but notice there was nothing to indicate the causal arrow points the way they suggest it does. If people didn't already have strokes caused by plaque buildup, that would indicate something. Since they do, maybe the plaque is trapping microplastic rather than microplastic being the cause of anything.
  • by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Thursday April 24, 2025 @12:43AM (#65327045)
    You have a whole spoon's worth of plastic in your brain.

    And if you still don't want government action on microplastics, well that's probably because you have a whole spoon's worth of plastic in your brain.
    • I fully support the research into the issue. But I worry about the way that small amounts of affirmative data can be blown up into full blown panics. You can already see evidence of every ailment being attributed to microplastics.

      • Because I don't think you heard me the first time.

        YOU HAVE A PLASTIC SPOON'S WORTH OF PLASTIC IN YOUR BRAIN.

        There is no world where that doesn't cause a whole raft of medical issues. It's not that every ailment is being blamed on it it's that having that much plastic floating around your brain is going to cause a lot medical ailments so you're going to see a lot of discussion about all the medical ailments it's causing.

        I swear to God I can get this country to freak out over 34 trans girls in spo
    • I hate to say it but that was sorta brilliant. Whoever hijacked rsilvergun's account is slightly witty 'ish

      • Same guy who's been posting here for going on 20 years. You're not getting rid of me that easily. My password is protected with ROT26 encryption.

        The weirdo who was posting with variations of my username is switched the posting as auto-generated random users and quoting old comments of mine though. So there is that.
    • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

      by geekmux ( 1040042 )

      You have a whole spoon's worth of plastic in your brain. And if you still don't want government action on microplastics, well that's probably because you have a whole spoon's worth of plastic in your brain.

      And if you still believe the government is here to help, you’re probably rolling joints made out of plastic.

      (Might not want to wonder too hard as to how the plastic got there.)

      • by OrangeTide ( 124937 ) on Thursday April 24, 2025 @06:48AM (#65327337) Homepage Journal

        The government belongs to the people. That we neglected our democracy is no excuse to blame anyone but ourselves for the current state of affairs.

        • The government belongs to the people. That we neglected our democracy is no excuse to blame anyone but ourselves for the current state of affairs.

          Our government in the US belongs to money and greed. People haven't been involved since long before Citizens United, though that was definitely the death-knell of even putting up a pretense that our government belongs to us. We fuck around with a dog and pony show called "elections," but all the candidates are bought and paid for, or shortly will be if they climb to any position of actual power. There's a reason we're in this mess currently. And it's mostly because Greed is God, with fancy trappings that ma

      • It's here to do whatever the people in charge of it tell it to do. Government is a tool. And every time you repeat that bullshit right when talking point from Ronald Reagan you put down the tool so somebody else can pick it up and beat you with it.
    • Thanks for politicizing the apolitical.
  • by vbdasc ( 146051 )

    Is it possible that this research got the causation backwards? Perhaps it's not excess microplastics that cause arterial plaques, but the exact opposite - the arterial plaques cause microplastics build up - because, you know, plaques slow the normal blood flow and promote micro particles' precipitation?

  • surely not our profit driven corporate overlords... it's almost like research funded by the gov't is beneficial

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