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Article ? AI-assigned paper type based on the abstract. Classification may not be perfect — flag errors using the feedback button. Tier 2 ? Original research — experimental, observational, or case-control study. Direct primary evidence. Detection Methods Environmental Sources Human Health Effects Marine & Wildlife Sign in to save

Unveiling Small-Sized Plastic Particles Hidden behind Large-Sized Ones in Human Excretion and Their Potential Sources

Environmental Science & Technology 2024 26 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 65 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Lihui An Long Zhu, Lihui An Long Zhu, Long Zhu, Zhixin Wu, Zhixin Wu, Zhixin Wu, Jiao Dong, Shaoyan Zhao, Long Zhu, Jiao Dong, Long Zhu, Long Zhu, Long Zhu, Long Zhu, Jiao Dong, Zhixin Wu, Zhixin Wu, Long Zhu, Long Zhu, Jingying Zhu, Long Zhu, Long Zhu, Jiao Dong, Jiao Dong, Jingying Zhu, Shaoyan Zhao, Shaoyan Zhao, Jiao Dong, Jiao Dong, Lihui An Jiao Dong, Lihui An Jingying Zhu, Jingying Zhu, Lihui An Long Zhu, Lihui An Long Zhu, Lihui An Lihui An Lihui An Shaoyan Zhao, Lihui An Lihui An Lihui An Long Zhu, Lihui An Zhixin Wu, Zhixin Wu, Jiao Dong, Jiao Dong, Shaoyan Zhao, Jiao Dong, Jiao Dong, Shaoyan Zhao, Shaoyan Zhao, Lihui An Lihui An Long Zhu, Lihui An Long Zhu, Jingying Zhu, Long Zhu, Long Zhu, Lihui An Jingying Zhu, Lihui An W.J. Wang, Lihui An Lihui An Lihui An Lihui An Lihui An Lihui An Lihui An Lihui An Lihui An W.J. Wang, Lihui An Lihui An Lihui An Fujun Ma, Lihui An Lihui An Lihui An Lihui An Lihui An Lihui An Fujun Ma, Lihui An Lihui An Lihui An Lihui An Jingying Zhu, Jingying Zhu, Lihui An Lihui An Lihui An Lihui An Lihui An Lihui An Lihui An Lihui An Lihui An Lihui An Lihui An Lihui An Lihui An

Summary

Using advanced detection methods, researchers found that very small plastic particles (under 20 micrometers) in human feces and urine actually outnumber the larger particles that most studies measure. The most common plastics found were polyethylene, PVC, PET, and polypropylene, and their levels correlated with the use of plastic food containers and eating seafood -- suggesting these are key ways tiny plastics enter our bodies.

Health risks of microplastic exposure have drawn growing global concerns due to the widespread distribution of microplastics in the environment. However, more evidence is needed to understand the exposure characteristics of microplastics owing to the limitation of current spectrum technologies, especially the missing information on small-sized particles. In the present study, laser direct infrared spectroscopy and thermal desorption-gas chromatography-mass spectrometry combined pyrolysis using a tubular furnace (TD-GC/MS) were employed to comprehensively detect the presence of plastic particles down to 0.22 μm in human excreted samples. The results showed that polyethylene (PE), polyvinyl chloride, PE terephthalate (PET), and polypropylene dominated large-sized (>20 μm) and small-sized plastic plastics (0.22-20 μm) in feces and urine. Moreover, fragments accounted for 60.71 and 60.37% in feces and urine, respectively, representing the most pervasive shape in excretion. Surprisingly, the concentration of small-sized particles was significantly higher than that of large-sized microplastics, accounting for 56.54 and 50.07% in feces (345.58 μg/g) and urine (6.49 μg/mL). Significant positive correlations were observed between the level of plastic particles in feces and the use of plastic containers and the consumption of aquatic products (Spearman correlation analysis, <i>p</i> < 0.01), suggesting the potential sources for plastic particles in humans. Furthermore, it is estimated that feces was the primary excretory pathway, consisting of 94.0% of total excreted microplastics daily. This study provides novel evidence regarding small-sized plastic particles, which are predominant fractions in human excretion, increasing the knowledge of the potential hazards of omnipresent microplastics to human exposure.

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