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From the Gut to the Brain: Microplastic‐Associated Neurovascular Dysfunction and Implications for Stroke Risk

Advanced Science 2026 Score: 50 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Xiangying Deng Xiangying Deng Hongxing Wang, Yujiao He, Yujiao He, Yujiao He, Hongxing Wang, Yujiao He, Xiaoyi Wang, Yujiao He, Pei Zou, Pei Zou, Xiaoyi Wang, Yujiao He, Xiaoyi Wang, Gang Peng, Gang Peng, Xiangying Deng

Summary

This review examines evidence that microplastics may affect neurovascular health through the gut-brain axis, potentially contributing to stroke risk factors. Researchers found that animal and in vitro studies suggest microplastics can disrupt gut barrier integrity, trigger systemic inflammation, and impair blood-brain barrier function, though the authors note that direct causal links in humans remain unestablished.

Models
Study Type In vitro

Microplastics (MPs) have emerged as pervasive environmental contaminants with increasing relevance to neurovascular health. Following oral exposure, accumulating evidence suggests that MPs can disrupt gut microbial homeostasis, impair intestinal epithelial barrier integrity, and engage the gut-brain axis (GBA), thereby promoting systemic and central inflammatory responses. These interconnected processes are linked to blood-brain barrier (BBB) dysfunction, cerebral microvascular impairment, and neurovascular alterations that are biologically relevant to stroke susceptibility. Evidence derived largely from animal and in vitro models, together with emerging epidemiological observations, supports the biological plausibility that microplastic (MP) exposure may contribute to neurovascular vulnerability through mechanisms involving endothelial inflammation, pro-thrombotic signaling, and atherosclerotic progression. However, substantial heterogeneity in exposure paradigms, particle characteristics, and analytical methodologies limits direct causal inference and translational interpretation in humans. Future research should prioritize standardized exposure frameworks and integrate multi-omics approaches with artificial intelligence (AI)-assisted analysis to better define exposure-response relationships and mechanistic pathways underlying MP-associated cerebrovascular alterations. Such efforts are essential for improving risk assessment and informing evidence-based strategies for environmental neurovascular health.

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