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A Hidden Pathway for Human Exposure to Micro- and Nanoplastics—The Mechanical Fragmentation of Plastic Products during Daily Use

Toxics 2023 26 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 55 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Lei Su Lei Su Lei Su Lei Su Yang Yu, Lei Su Lei Su Lei Su Lei Su Lei Su Lei Su Yang Yu, Lei Su Lei Su Lei Su Nicholas J. Craig, Lei Su Lei Su Lei Su Lei Su Nicholas J. Craig, Lei Su Lei Su Lei Su Nicholas J. Craig, Lei Su Nicholas J. Craig, Nicholas J. Craig, Nicholas J. Craig, Nicholas J. Craig, Nicholas J. Craig, Lei Su Lei Su Nicholas J. Craig, Nicholas J. Craig, Nicholas J. Craig, Lei Su Lei Su Nicholas J. Craig, Nicholas J. Craig, Lei Su Nicholas J. Craig, Nicholas J. Craig, Nicholas J. Craig, Nicholas J. Craig, Lei Su Lei Su Lei Su Lei Su Lei Su Lei Su Lei Su Lei Su Lei Su Lei Su Nicholas J. Craig, Nicholas J. Craig, Nicholas J. Craig, Lei Su Nicholas J. Craig, Nicholas J. Craig, Lei Su Lei Su Nicholas J. Craig, Nicholas J. Craig, Nicholas J. Craig, Nicholas J. Craig, Nicholas J. Craig, Nicholas J. Craig, Nicholas J. Craig, Nicholas J. Craig, Lei Su Lei Su Lei Su Nicholas J. Craig, Nicholas J. Craig, Nicholas J. Craig, Lei Su Lei Su

Summary

This review examines a commonly overlooked source of human microplastic exposure: the mechanical wear and fragmentation of everyday plastic products during normal use. Researchers found that activities like opening containers, using cutting boards, and handling plastic items release significant quantities of micro- and nanoplastics directly into our immediate environment. The study highlights that this daily fragmentation pathway may contribute more to personal microplastic exposure than previously appreciated.

Models

In numerous environmental compartments around the world, the existence of micro- and nanoplastics (MNPs) in the environment has been verified. A growing number of studies have looked at the interaction between MNPs and human activities due to the risks they may pose to humans. Exposure pathways are key factors in measuring MNPs risks. However, current research largely ignores the contribution of mechanical fragmentation pathways to MNPs exposure during the daily use of plastic products. Our critical review demonstrated the research gap between MNP fragmentation and risk assessments via a network analysis. The release of fragmented MNPs and their properties were also described at various scales, with emphasis on environmental stressors and mechanical fragmentation. In the scenarios of daily use, plastic products such as food packaging and clothing provide acute pathways of MNPs exposure. The release tendency of those products (up to 10<sup>2</sup> mg MNPs) are several orders of magnitude higher than MNPs abundances in natural compartments. Despite the limited evidence available, waste recycling, landfill and municipal activities represented long-term pathways for MNPs fragmentation and point sources of MNPs pollution in environmental media. Assessing the health effects of the fragmentation process, unfortunately, is further hampered by the current absence of human exposure impact assessments for secondary MNPs. We proposed that future studies should integrate aging evaluation into risk assessment frameworks and establish early warning signs of MNPs released from plastic products.

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