Researchers confirm near-universal presence of microplastics in brain
A team of Chinese researchers confirmed the presence of microplastics and nanoplastics in the living human brain and systematically revealed their distribution characteristics in both brain tumor tissues and healthy brain tissue, according to Beijing Tiantan Hospital on April 28.
Microplastics and nanoplastics are emerging global contaminants of concern because of their ability to penetrate human tissues and their detection in several human organs, including the brain. However, their concentrations in, and effects on, this organ remain largely unexplored.
Researchers from Beijing Tiantan Hospital, Peking Union Medical College Hospital and Chinese Research Academy of Environmental Sciences spent four years analyzing 156 diseased brain samples from 113 patients with brain tumors, along with 35 healthy brain samples from five postmortem donors.
The results showed that microplastics and nanoplastics were detected in 99.4 percent of diseased brain samples and 100 percent of healthy brain samples.
A higher concentration of microplastics and nanoplastics was observed in peritumoral brain tissues than in healthy brain tissue, according to the research article published in the journal Nature Health.
Meanwhile, the study found that nanoplastics accounted for more than half of the total plastic burden, suggesting that smaller particles may be more likely to cross the blood-brain barrier and enter brain tissue, Beijing Tiantan Hospital noted.
To explain why these plastic particles are present in brain tissue, the researchers proposed two possible hypotheses.
One is that the plastic particles may primarily remain within the brain's vascular system. The other is that under brain tumor conditions, the blood-brain barrier or blood-tumor barrier may be compromised, potentially allowing plastic particles to cross these barriers, enter the brain parenchyma and accumulate there.
The researchers also investigated the possible sources of these plastic particles. Among brain tumor patients, factors such as preoperative injection frequency, body mass index, age, frequency of cosmetic use and the use of plastic food wrap were associated with higher microplastic abundance.
The study identified the distribution characteristics of microplastics and nanoplastics in the human brain and their correlations with pathological barrier status and tumor proliferation indicators, said Chen Xiaolin, chief physician at the Neurosurgery Center of Beijing Tiantan Hospital, adding that the findings cannot directly prove that these particles cause the development, progression or poor prognosis of brain tumors.
Xinhua
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