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Tuesday, October 30, 2018

Microplastic in Your Poop - Is this Something New to Worry About?

A recent study found that human stool samples collected from 8 volunteers all contained microplastic.  Microplastics, from 50 micrometers to 500 micrometers in size, are generated through our use and discarding of plastic.  They are "created unintentionally by shredding, abrasion or decomposition of larger plastic parts in the environment".

We have known that microplastics are widespread in the environment including the oceans.  It has been shown to be a wide variety of animals including worms and mammals.  The impact on health is not fully understood, "there are initial indications that microplastics can damage the gastrointestinal tract by promoting inflammatory reactions or absorbing harmful substances, further studies are needed to assess the potential dangers of microplastics for humans".

Microplastics Found in Human Stools for First Time
News   Oct 23, 2018 | Original Story from the Medical University of Vienna.


In a pilot study conducted by the Federal Environment Agency and the Medical University of Vienna, microplastics in the human stool was discovered for the first time – in all of the eight international participants. Bettina Liebmann from the Federal Environment Agency and Philipp Schwabl from the Medical University of Vienna have succeeded in proving this. The results are presented today at the International UEG Gastroenterology Congress in Vienna and form the basis for further investigations on a larger scale.

The participants in the study, five women and three men aged 33-65, live in Finland, the Netherlands, the United Kingdom, Italy, Poland, Russia, Japan and Austria. They kept a nutrition diary for one week and then gave a stool sample. All participants consumed plastic-packed food or beverages from PET bottles, the majority of them consumed fish or seafood, and no one fed exclusively on vegetarian food.

The experts from the Federal Environment Agency analysed the participants’ stool in the laboratory with regard to ten of the most widely used plastics in the world. In all eight persons, microplastics was detected in the stool, on average 20 microplastics particles per 10 grams of stool. “In our laboratory, we were able to detect nine different types of plastics ranging in size from 50 to 500 micrometres,” explains Bettina Liebmann, the expert at the Federal Environment Agency responsible for microplastics analyses. PP (polypropylene) and PET (polyethylene terephthalate) was most frequently found in the samples.

“Due to the small number of volunteers, we are unable to establish a reliable connection between nutritional behaviour and exposure to microplastics”, explains the first author Philipp Schwabl from the Division of Gastroenterology and Hepatology at MedUni Vienna, “the effects of the microplastic particles found on the human organism – in particular on the digestive tract – can only be investigated in the context of a larger study”.

In other studies, the highest microplastics concentrations were found in animals in the gastrointestinal tract, but smallest plastic particles were also found in blood, lymph and even in the liver. “Although there are initial indications that microplastics can damage the gastrointestinal tract by promoting inflammatory reactions or absorbing harmful substances, further studies are needed to assess the potential dangers of microplastics for humans,” Schwabl notes.

Plastic particles with a size of less than 5 millimetres are called microplastics. This is used as an additive in cosmetic products, but is mainly created unintentionally by shredding, abrasion or decomposition of larger plastic parts in the environment.

Global plastic production has grown rapidly since the 1950s and currently is more than 400 million tons per year. It is estimated that two to five percent of the plastic produced ends up in the sea, where the waste is crushed and absorbed by marine animals and can reach humans via the food chain. In addition, it is very likely that food will come into contact with plastics during processing or through packaging – and thus also with microplastics.

This article has been republished from materials provided by the Medical University of Vienna. Note: material may have been edited for length and content. For further information, please contact the cited source.

Reference
Assessment of microplastics concentrations in human stool – Preliminary results of a prospective study – Philipp Schwabl, Bettina Liebmann, Sebastian Köppel, Philipp Königshofer, Theresa Bucsics, Michael Trauner, Thomas Reiberger, presented in the scope of the UEG Week 2018 in Vienna on 24 October 2018.


Science
Science 11 Jul 2014:
Vol. 345, Issue 6193, pp. 144-145
DOI: 10.1126/science.1254065http://science.sciencemag.org/content/345/6193/144
Microplastics in the seas

Kara Lavender Law1, Richard C. Thompson2
1Department of Oceanography, Sea Education Association, Woods Hole, MA 02543, USA.
2School of Marine Science and Engineering, Plymouth University, Plymouth PL4 8AA, UK.
E-mail: klavender@sea.edu

Plastic debris in the marine environment is more than just an unsightly problem. Images of beach litter and large floating debris may first come to mind, but much recent concern about plastic pollution has focused on microplastic particles too small to be easily detected by eye (see the figure). Microplastics are likely the most numerically abundant items of plastic debris in the ocean today, and quantities will inevitably increase, in part because large, single plastic items ultimately degrade into millions of microplastic pieces. Microplastics are of environmental concern because their size (millimeters or smaller) renders them accessible to a wide range of organisms at least as small as zooplankton, with potential for physical and toxicological harm.

Since its introduction in the published literature in 2004 (1), the term microplastic has been widely used to describe plastic fragments in the marine environment. Typically considered to be smaller than 5 mm in diameter, microplastics are ill defined by size, with ranges that vary between studies. In most open-water studies, microplastics are measured with plankton nets, and particles smaller than the net mesh (typically ∼0.33 mm) can evade capture. In marine sediment, bulk sampling can retain particles of all sizes; however, efficient identification is a serious challenge in quantifying microplastic loads, especially with decreasing size. Spectroscopic analysis has identified individual fragments of common plastics as small as 20 µm in diameter.

The sources of microplastic include fragmentation of larger items entering by rivers, runoff, tides, winds, and catastrophic events, together with at-sea sources, including lost cargo and fishing and aquaculture gear. There are also direct inputs of microplastics as micrometer-sized particles, such as cosmetic beads and clothing fibers that pass through wastewater treatment into the environment. Although the sources are well known, knowledge of their relative contribution and geographic distribution is limited.

Once in the ocean, floating microplastics are transported passively by complex two- and three-dimensional physical flows, resulting in very large variability in surface concentrations that makes detection of long-term trends difficult even in the heavily sampled western North Atlantic (2) and eastern North Pacific Oceans (3). Oceanographic models [including (4)] and environmental observations find very high concentrations (up to 106 pieces km−2) of floating microplastic in subtropical ocean gyres, far from land-based sources. In these gyres, converging surface currents trap and retain floating debris. Similarly high concentrations have been observed in enclosed basins such as the Mediterranean Sea (5).

In coastal sediments around the world, microplastics also appear to be ubiquitous, with quantities typically ranging from 2 to 30 particles per 250 ml of sediment (6). Arctic sea ice is the most recently identified reservoir of microplastics (7). With the exception of localized spills, the relationship between microplastic concentration and its sources is poorly understood because of complex transport mechanisms and unknown fragmentation rates.

Because of their size, microplastics may have different effects from larger items of debris. For example, floating microplastics in open ocean gyres provide habitats for diverse communities of microorganisms, with assemblages that differ from those in surrounding seawater and that vary with polymer type (8). Furthermore, microplastics may be ingested by many diverse organisms, and some animals such as mussels can retain particles after ingestion (9); ingestion of small quantities of microplastics can disrupt physiological processes in marine worms, compromising their ability to store energy (10).

Plastic debris readily accumulates harmful chemicals such as dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane (DDT), polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), and polybrominated diphenyl ethers (PBDEs) from seawater worldwide (11), increasing their concentration by orders of magnitude. This process is reversible, with microplastics releasing contaminants upon ingestion (12) and laboratory evidence of uptake in marine worms (13) and fish (14). Transfer depends on the polymer, contaminant, and conditions in the organism, particularly pH and temperature. These interactions are specific but not yet fully predictable (15). There is also concern that plastic debris might release monomers and potentially toxic additives such as plasticizers, flame retardants, and antimicrobial agents that are incorporated into plastics during manufacture.

This emerging evidence of harm comes primarily from laboratory studies. It is unclear whether microplastics in the environment transport chemicals to biota in concentrations high enough to cause substantial damage. The potential for harm from microplastics could increase with decreasing particle size, but size distributions and generation and degradation rates are essentially unknown, and the resulting effects on natural populations are difficult to ascertain. Nevertheless, ingestion of microplastics by mammals, fish, birds, and invertebrates is now well documented. Although quantities can be low, the widespread incidence in some natural populations together with evidence of potentially harmful effects is cause for concern.

Major questions remain about the risks from microplastics to marine organisms and ecosystems, as well as to food safety and public health. Research is urgently needed on the behavior of different polymers in the environment, including fragmentation, chemical release, degradation, transport, and accumulation; the rate at which organisms encounter microplastics, based on particle size and degradation time; and the physical, chemical, and interactive risks to organisms from these encounters, including possible magnification with increasing trophic level (biomagnification).

Given the concerns over microplastics, the temptation may be to “clean up the mess,” but substantial removal of microplastic debris from the environment is not feasible. Identification and elimination of some of the major inputs of plastic waste is a more promising route, as is reduced consumption and the recognition of plastic waste as a resource. With the rapidly increasing human population, the need for greater resource efficiency could have a secondary benefit in reducing the quantities of debris entering the environment.


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