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Microplastics from face masks: Unraveling combined toxicity with environmental hazards and their impacts on food safety

Comprehensive Reviews in Food Science and Food Safety 2024 9 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Luyu Pei, Lina Sheng, Yongli Ye, Jiadi Sun, Jia‐Sheng Wang, Xiulan Sun

Summary

This review examines how discarded face masks release microplastics into the environment and how these particles can absorb other pollutants, potentially transferring harmful chemicals through the food chain. The study found that environmental factors like UV light, temperature, and pH influence how quickly masks break down into microplastics. The authors highlight that the combined effect of mask-derived microplastics and absorbed contaminants on food safety remains largely unstudied.

Microplastics (MPs) refer to tiny plastic particles, typically smaller than 5 mm in size. Due to increased mask usage during COVID-19, improper disposal has led to masks entering the environment and releasing MPs into the surroundings. MPs can absorb environmental hazards and transfer them to humans and animals via the food chain, yet their impacts on food safety and human health are largely neglected. This review summarizes the release process of MPs from face masks, influencing factors, and impacts on food safety. Highlights are given to the prevalence of MPs and their combined toxicities with other environmental hazards. Control strategies are also explored. The release of MPs from face masks is affected by environmental factors like pH, UV light, temperature, ionic strength, and weathering. Due to the chemical active surface and large surface area, MPs can act as vectors for heavy metals, toxins, pesticides, antibiotics and antibiotic resistance genes, and foodborne pathogens through different mechanisms, such as electrostatic interaction, precipitation, and bioaccumulation. After being adsorbed by MPs, the toxicity of these environmental hazards, such as oxidative stress, cell apoptosis, and disruption of metabolic energy levels, can be magnified. However, there is a lack of comprehensive research on both the combined toxicities of MPs and environmental hazards, as well as their corresponding control strategies. Future research should prioritize understanding the interaction of MPs with other hazards in the food chain, their combined toxicity, and integrating MPs detection and degradation methods with other hazards.

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