Hip
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SUMMARY: By my calculation (given below), if you drank one litre of mineral water from a plastic bottle every day for your whole life, you would still consume far less nanoplastic than you get from eating just one food item in a plastic container that was heated up in a microwave.
So it might be prudent to take microwave meals out of their plastic containers, and to place them on a plate, before microwaving them.
A study found that microwave-heating food for 3 minutes in a plastic container releases 2.11 billion nanoplastic particles and 4.22 million microplastic particles per square centimetre of plastic area. Article about the study here.
So if you are microwaving some ready-made food from a supermarket — like a microwave meal that comes in a plastic container with around 250 square centimetres of plastic surface in contact with the food — you are going to be ingesting about 500 billion nanoplastic particles, and about 1 billion microplastic particles. So that's half a trillion nanoplastic particles from one microwave meal!
The study tested polyethylene and polypropylene plastic containers. This article indicates that ready-made microwave meal plastic trays are made of polypropylene or CPET.
By comparison, a study found that a litre plastic bottle of mineral water contains around 240,000 particles of plastic, 90% of which is nanoplastics, and the remaining 10% microplastics. Thus that would be around 216,000 nanoplastic particles and 24,000 microplastic particles per bottle.
So if you drank a litre bottle of mineral water every day for 100 years, you would consume around 8 billion nanoplastic particles over that time, and approximately 1 billion microplastic particles.
Thus clearly you ingest far more nanoplastic by microwaving just one food item in a plastic container than you would from a lifetime of drinking mineral water. And this single heated food item will give you about the same amount of microplastic as a whole lifetime of mineral water.
Thus it would seem advisable to remove food from plastic containers, placing the food on a plate or in a bowl, before microwaving it.
EDIT: there is a correction to the above calculation in this post below.
Nanoplastics are thought potentially more dangerous to human health than microplastics, because due to their smaller size, they can easily enter the bloodstream when ingested, can cross the blood-brain barrier, traverse the placental barrier, and can enter into cells.
Estimates for the amount of microplastic and nanoplastic particles ingested into the body per year are:
- 121,000 particles of microplastic are ingested by each human per year from food, drinks and breathing air. Ref: here
- 22 million particles of microplastic and nanoplastic are inhaled by each human every year. Ref: here
Due to the accumulation of microplastic and nanoplastic in the body, human brains now contain about 0.5% plastic by weight, with brains accumulating plastic at levels 10 to 20 times higher than other organs like the liver and kidneys. Ref: here
The health impacts of microplastic and nanoplastic particles in the body are still not clear, but it is thought they may potentially lead to a range of health issues, including respiratory disorders like lung cancer, asthma and hypersensitivity pneumonitis, neurological symptoms such as fatigue and dizziness, inflammatory bowel disease and even disturbances in gut microbiota, according to this study.
And this paper lists many potential ill effects, including the following:
[Nanoplastics and microplastics] pose a substantial risk to the endocrine system by interfering with hormone production, release, transport, metabolism, and elimination. This interference can lead to a range of endocrine disorders, including metabolic, developmental, and reproductive disorders such as infertility, miscarriage, and congenital malformations.
Furthermore, research is ongoing to understand the potential impact of microplastics on the human immune system, and evidence has been found of chronic inflammation and homeostasis disturbances in animal studies and the activation of innate immunity in human lung cells.
Collectively, cellular and animal experiments have elucidated the role of microplastics in inducing oxidative stress, disrupting cellular structures, triggering inflammatory responses, lipid metabolism disturbances, gut microbiota dysbiosis, and neurotoxicity.
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