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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. Environmental Sources Human Health Effects Sign in to save

Atmospheric microplastics: exposure, toxicity, and detrimental health effects

RSC Advances 2023 95 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.
Angela Patricia Abad López, Victoria A. Arana Victoria A. Arana Angela Patricia Abad López, Carlos David Grande‐Tovar, Victoria A. Arana Victoria A. Arana Victoria A. Arana Victoria A. Arana Victoria A. Arana Jorge Trilleras, Victoria A. Arana Jorge Trilleras, Jorge Trilleras, Jorge Trilleras, Victoria A. Arana Victoria A. Arana Carlos David Grande‐Tovar, Carlos David Grande‐Tovar, Carlos David Grande‐Tovar, Carlos David Grande‐Tovar, Jorge Trilleras, Victoria A. Arana Luz Stella Garcia-Alzate, Victoria A. Arana Victoria A. Arana Victoria A. Arana Luz Stella Garcia-Alzate, Victoria A. Arana Carlos David Grande‐Tovar, Victoria A. Arana Victoria A. Arana Victoria A. Arana Jorge Trilleras, Jorge Trilleras, Jorge Trilleras, Jorge Trilleras, Jorge Trilleras, Jorge Trilleras, Jorge Trilleras, Jorge Trilleras, Victoria A. Arana Victoria A. Arana

Summary

This review summarizes what is known about microplastics in the air, including their sources, how they travel, and their effects on human health when inhaled or swallowed. Airborne microplastics come from synthetic textiles, road dust, construction materials, and industrial processes, and can trigger inflammation and oxidative stress in the lungs and other organs. The authors conclude that atmospheric microplastics represent an underappreciated route of human exposure that deserves more research and regulation.

Body Systems

Microplastics (MPs) are micro-particulate pollutants present in all environments whose ubiquity leads humans to unavoidable exposure. Due to low density, MPs also accumulate in the atmosphere, where they are easily transported worldwide and come into direct contact with the human body by inhalation or ingestion, causing detrimental health effects. This literature review presents the sources of atmospheric MPs pollution, transport routes, physicochemical characteristics, and environmental interactions. The document also explains the implications for human health and analyzes the risk of exposure based on the potential toxicity and the concentration in the atmosphere. MPs' toxicity lies in their physical characteristics, chemical composition, environmental interactions, and degree of aging. The abundance and concentration of these microparticles are associated with nearby production sources and their displacement in the atmosphere. The above elements are presented in an integrated way to facilitate a better understanding of the associated risk. The investigation results encourage the development of future research that delves into the health implications of exposure to airborne MPs and raises awareness of the risks of current plastic pollution to promote the establishment of relevant mitigation policies and procedures.

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