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Effects of microplastics on the immune system: How much should we worry?

Immunology Letters 2025 11 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 68 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Claudia Vanetti, Martina Broggiato, Claudia Vanetti, Martina Broggiato, Martina Broggiato, Stefania Pezzana, Martina Broggiato, Stefania Pezzana, Mario Clerici, Claudia Vanetti, Claudia Vanetti, Claudio Fenizia Claudio Fenizia

Summary

This review examines how microplastics may affect the human immune system, noting that people are mainly exposed through food and breathing. While early research shows microplastics can trigger inflammation and immune responses in lab and animal studies, the authors stress that more research is needed to understand what this means for human health at real-world exposure levels.

Plastics are everywhere. It is widely recognized that they represent a global problem, the extent of which is yet to be defined. Humans are broadly exposed to plastics, whose effects and consequences are poorly characterized so far. The main route of exposure is via alimentary and respiratory intake. Plastics pollutions may come from both: water and food contamination itself, and their packaging. The smaller sizes (i.e. microplastics <150 µm - MPs) are considered to be the most pervasive of living organisms and, therefore, potentially the most harmful. As humans occupy one of the apex positions of the food chain, we are exposed to bioaccumulation and biomagnification effects of MPs. In fact, MPs are commonly found in human stools and blood. However, there are no data available yet on their ability to accumulate and to produce detrimental consequences on biological systems. Even though the effects of plastics pollution are poorly studied in mammals, including humans, they appear to have inflammatory effects, which is rather concerning as many etiologies of disease are based on a pro-inflammatory status.

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