Microplastics Aren’t Just in the Ocean, They’re in Your Bedroom
Hi, it’s Harry in London. It’s time to say goodbye to the plastic lunch box that I saved after my last takeaway. I’ve decided to make the switch to glass. But more on that to follow...
When sunlight filters through the window, most of us presume that the tiny particles dancing in the air are dust. Turns out many are probably fragments of polyethylene and other microplastics.
The polluting debris floats around indoors in far higher concentrations than previously thought, researchers in France said in a paper published this week. We could be inhaling 68,000 microplastic fragments a day just in our homes and cars, according to Nadiia Yakovenko, who co-led the study, and her colleagues at the University of Toulouse.
Even more importantly for human health, the scientists found that the vast majority of particles were smaller than 10 micrometers — about a seventh to a 10th of the thickness of a strand of hair. “The smaller the particles are, the further it’s going to penetrate into human tissue,” Yakovenko said in an interview. Because they can go deep into our bodies, the pollutants may contribute to damaging the lungs and the digestive system, triggering inflammation and many associated diseases, she added.
“These particles are completely invisible to the naked eye,” the authors wrote. “We inhale thousands of them every day without even realizing it. Deep inside our lungs, microplastics release toxic additives that reach our blood and cause multiple diseases.”