Recent research has cast doubt on alarming claims about microplastic ingestion, such as consuming a credit card's worth weekly. While microplastics are widespread in the environment and human tissues, studies suggest exposure levels are far lower than feared, and health impacts remain unclear. Experts urge caution until more rigorous data emerges.
Microplastics, tiny plastic particles, have been detected in diverse locations, including the highest mountains, deepest ocean trenches, remote polar regions, and human organs like the heart, liver, kidney, breast milk, and bloodstream. Their ubiquity stems from the durability of plastics, first introduced with Bakelite in the early 20th century, which revolutionized packaging, electronics, and medical devices but also led to environmental shedding over a century.
A widely circulated 2019 study, funded by the World Wildlife Fund and the University of Newcastle, claimed average weekly ingestion of 5 grams of microplastics—equivalent to a credit card. This review of 59 prior studies mixed particle counts and mass measurements, relying on estimations like applying ocean water data to drinking water, which inflated results. Later analyses corrected this, estimating actual intake at 0.0041 milligrams per week, comparable to less than a grain of salt. At that rate, it would take over 23,000 years to ingest a credit card's worth. Simulations predict lifetime accumulation of 12.2 milligrams, with only 41 nanograms absorbed by the body.
Concerns about detection methods have arisen; for example, vaporizing tissue samples can produce false positives from fat molecules mimicking plastics. Animal studies, such as those on mice given 1 gram daily—far exceeding realistic exposure—showed behavioral changes and inflammation. A pig study with 1 gram weekly noted effects on 86 genes and oxidative stress in the pancreas. However, a 2022 World Health Organization report highlighted that such experiments use unrealistically high doses and larger particles, with microplastic circulation differing between rodents and humans.
In humans, one study linked microplastics in arterial plaques to higher heart attack and stroke rates, but established only correlation, not causation. Chemicals in microplastics may leach, yet gut simulations indicate negligible tissue increases, as they can exit via feces. Potential risks like toxin transport or immune interference remain unproven compared to other pollutants. The field lacks solid data, so researchers recommend focusing concerns elsewhere pending further evidence.