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88 Microplastic References for Inhalation Studies

Annals of Work Exposures and Health 2023 Score: 40 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Wendel Wohlleben Katherine Santizo, Wendel Wohlleben Katherine Santizo, George Sarau, Wendel Wohlleben Hannah Mangold, Wendel Wohlleben Katherine Santizo, George Sarau, Wendel Wohlleben Silke Christiansen, Wendel Wohlleben Katherine Santizo, George Sarau, Wendel Wohlleben Katherine Santizo, Hannah Mangold, Hannah Mangold, George Sarau, Katherine Santizo, Katherine Santizo, Katherine Santizo, Katherine Santizo, George Sarau, Wendel Wohlleben Wendel Wohlleben George Sarau, Wendel Wohlleben Silke Christiansen, George Sarau, Wendel Wohlleben Wendel Wohlleben Wendel Wohlleben Wendel Wohlleben Sarah Illies, Wendel Wohlleben Katherine Santizo, Sarah Illies, Silke Christiansen, A. Kraus, Wendel Wohlleben Tanja Hansen, Tanja Hansen, Silke Christiansen, George Sarau, A. Kraus, A. Kraus, Silke Christiansen, Wendel Wohlleben George Sarau, Silke Christiansen, A. Kraus, Wendel Wohlleben Wendel Wohlleben Silke Christiansen, Wendel Wohlleben Wendel Wohlleben Silke Christiansen, Tanja Hansen, Silke Christiansen, Wendel Wohlleben Tanja Hansen, Wendel Wohlleben Wendel Wohlleben Wendel Wohlleben Silke Christiansen, Wendel Wohlleben Wendel Wohlleben Wendel Wohlleben Wendel Wohlleben Wendel Wohlleben Wendel Wohlleben Silke Christiansen, Wendel Wohlleben Wendel Wohlleben Wendel Wohlleben George Sarau, Wendel Wohlleben George Sarau, Wendel Wohlleben Silke Christiansen, George Sarau, George Sarau, Silke Christiansen, Wendel Wohlleben Silke Christiansen, George Sarau, George Sarau, Silke Christiansen, Silke Christiansen, Silke Christiansen, Wendel Wohlleben Wendel Wohlleben Wendel Wohlleben

Summary

This study developed standardized reference microplastic particles in multiple polymer types (TPU, PA-6, PET, LDPE) in the sub-10 micron respirable size range, addressing a critical gap in inhalation toxicology research where consistent reference materials have been lacking. Having well-characterized reference particles will allow different labs to produce comparable results when studying how inhaled microplastics affect lung cells.

Body Systems
Study Type In vitro

Abstract Microplastic research has been increasing due to the uncertainty of potential effects on the environment and human health. However, microplastic references are currently missing. Not only is there a lack of references there is also a lack of diversity in polymer type for references, especially in toxicological studies. In specific, inhalation studies must rely on microplastics that are respirable and/or inhalable (< 10 µm) to result in toxicological outcomes. Therefore, in this project, we focus on using solvent precipitation to produce microplastic references from TPU, PA-6, PET, and LDPE for microplastic inhalation toxicity studies. Particle size distribution of the dispersion is used to verify that the desired size range is achieved. To demonstrate that the produced microplastic references are representative from its original material, molecular and particle descriptors are characterized. Chemical composition, molecular weight, crystallinity, solidity, density, are among the descriptors tested for both the produced microplastic references and its corresponding commercial counterpart. Preliminary results have shown that quantities needed for in-vitro testing and particle size range desired is achieved with successful production of sub-100 nm constituent particle counts and all-respirable mass-based diameters. SEM images confirm the size distribution and show distribution of particle shapes. Chemical composition via spontaneous Raman Scattering illustrates clear polymer spectra signals from the microplastic dispersions. These microplastic reference materials are complemented by toxicology controls. In addition, the in-vitro screening uses both submersed and air-liquid interface cultures to expose cells. This study will thus provide information on microplastic material descriptors relevant for inhalation toxicity.

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