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Efficient extraction of small microplastic particles from rat feed and feces for quantification

Heliyon 2023 22 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Benuarda Toto, Alice Refosco, Jutta Dierkes, Tanja Kögel

Summary

Researchers developed a three-step chemical and enzymatic digestion protocol to efficiently extract small microplastic particles — down to 15 micrometers — from rat food and feces, achieving high recovery rates for polyamide and polyethylene. The validated method enables accurate measurement of microplastics in animal feeding studies, supporting research into how humans and animals are exposed to and excrete microplastics through diet.

Polymers
Models
Study Type In vivo

To date, microplastic is ubiquitously encountered in the environment. Studies analyzing microplastic in terrestrial ecosystems, including animal feces and feed, are few. Microplastic quantification method validation and harmonization are not yet far developed. For the analysis of small microplastic, approximately <0.5 mm, extraction from organic and inorganic materials is fundamental prior to quantitative and qualitative analysis. Method validation, including recovery studies, are necessary throughout the analytical chain. In this study, we developed an optimized, efficient protocol with a duration of 72 h for the digestion of laboratory rat feed and feces. A combination of a mild acidic (H2O2 15%; HNO3 5%) and an alkaline treatment (10% KOH) dissolving the previous filter, followed by enzymatic digestion (Viscozyme®L) proved to be efficient for the extraction and identification of spiked polyamide (15-20 μm) and polyethylene (40-48 μm) from feed and feces samples from rats, showing high recovery rates. Extracted rat feces samples from an in vivo study in which Wistar rats were fed with feed containing microplastic were analyzed with pyrolysis-gas chromatography-Orbitrap™ mass spectrometry, quantifying recovered microplastic in rat feces in environmentally relevant concentrations. The presented three-step protocol provides a suitable, time and cost-effective method to extract microplastic from rat feed and feces.

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