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PM10-bound microplastics and trace metals: A public health insight from the Korean subway and indoor environments

Journal of Hazardous Materials 2024 10 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 60 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Debananda Roy, Debananda Roy, Debananda Roy, Debananda Roy, Jayun Kim, Minjoo Larry Lee Seunga Kim, Seunga Kim, Joonhong Park, Minjoo Larry Lee

Summary

Researchers measured airborne microplastics bound to breathable dust particles in Korean subway stations, homes, and outdoor areas, finding indoor levels about four times higher than outdoors. Microplastic particles deposited in the lungs were highest in residential homes due to the amount of time people spend indoors. The study warns that long-term inhalation of these tiny plastic particles may significantly increase the risk of respiratory disease.

Inhalable airborne microplastics (MPs) presented in indoor and outdoor environments, can deeply penetrate the lungs, potentially triggering inflammation and respiratory illnesses. The present study aims to evaluate human health risks from respirable particulate matter (PM)-bound trace metals and MPs in indoor (SW- subway and IRH- indoor residential houses) and outdoor (OD) environments. This research provides an initial approach to human respiratory tract (HRT) mass depositions of PM10-bound total MPs and nine specific MP types to predict potential human health threats from inhalation exposure. Results indicate that PM-bound trace metals and MPs were around 4 times higher in SW microenvironments compared to OD locations. In IRH, cancer risk (CR) levels were estimated 9 and 4 times higher for PM10 and PM2.5, respectively. Additionally, MP particle depositions per gram of lung cell weight were highest in IRH (23.77), followed by OD and SW. Whereas, lifetime alveoli depositions of MPs were estimated at 13.73 MP/g, which exceeds previously reported respiratory disease fatality cases by 10 to 5 times. Prolonged exposure duration at IRH emerged as a key factor contributing to increased CR and MP lung deposition levels. This research highlights severe lung risks from inhaling PM-bound MPs and metals, offering valuable health insights.

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