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
Distribution and potential health impacts of microplastics and microrubbers in air and street dusts from Asaluyeh County, Iran
Environmental Pollution2018
719 citations
?
Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Score: 60
?
0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Sajjad Abbasi,
Sajjad Abbasi,
Sajjad Abbasi,
Sajjad Abbasi,
Sajjad Abbasi,
Sajjad Abbasi,
Sajjad Abbasi,
Sajjad Abbasi,
Sajjad Abbasi,
Sajjad Abbasi,
Sajjad Abbasi,
Sajjad Abbasi,
Sajjad Abbasi,
Sajjad Abbasi,
Sajjad Abbasi,
Sajjad Abbasi,
Sajjad Abbasi,
Sajjad Abbasi,
Sajjad Abbasi,
Sajjad Abbasi,
Sajjad Abbasi,
Sajjad Abbasi,
Sajjad Abbasi,
Sajjad Abbasi,
Sajjad Abbasi,
Sajjad Abbasi,
Sajjad Abbasi,
Sajjad Abbasi,
Sajjad Abbasi,
Sajjad Abbasi,
Frank J. Kelly,
Frank J. Kelly,
Andrew Turner
Andrew Turner
Andrew Turner
Andrew Turner
Andrew Turner
Andrew Turner
Andrew Turner
Andrew Turner
Andrew Turner
Andrew Turner
Andrew Turner
Andrew Turner
Andrew Turner
Andrew Turner
Andrew Turner
Andrew Turner
Andrew Turner
Andrew Turner
Andrew Turner
Andrew Turner
Andrew Turner
Andrew Turner
Andrew Turner
Sajjad Abbasi,
Andrew Turner
Behnam Keshavarzi,
Behnam Keshavarzi,
Andrew Turner
Andrew Turner
Andrew Turner
Andrew Turner
Sajjad Abbasi,
Andrew Turner
Andrew Turner
Andrew Turner
Andrew Turner
Frank J. Kelly,
Andrew Turner
Andrew Turner
Sajjad Abbasi,
Behnam Keshavarzi,
Behnam Keshavarzi,
Behnam Keshavarzi,
Behnam Keshavarzi,
Behnam Keshavarzi,
Farid Moore,
Farid Moore,
Sajjad Abbasi,
Andrew Turner
Farid Moore,
Sajjad Abbasi,
Farid Moore,
Andrew Turner
Andrew Turner
Sajjad Abbasi,
Behnam Keshavarzi,
Andrew Turner
Sajjad Abbasi,
Andrew Turner
Andrew Turner
Behnam Keshavarzi,
Farid Moore,
Andrew Turner
Sajjad Abbasi,
Andrew Turner
Sajjad Abbasi,
Farid Moore,
Behnam Keshavarzi,
Andrew Turner
Farid Moore,
Behnam Keshavarzi,
Andrew Turner
Farid Moore,
Andrew Turner
Sajjad Abbasi,
Andrew Turner
Behnam Keshavarzi,
Farid Moore,
Andrew Turner
Andrew Turner
Sajjad Abbasi,
Behnam Keshavarzi,
Sajjad Abbasi,
Andrew Turner
Frank J. Kelly,
Farid Moore,
Behnam Keshavarzi,
Frank J. Kelly,
Behnam Keshavarzi,
Andrew Turner
Andrew Turner
Behnam Keshavarzi,
Behnam Keshavarzi,
Andrew Turner
Behnam Keshavarzi,
Andrew Turner
Andrew Turner
Andrew Turner
Andrew Turner
Behnam Keshavarzi,
Behnam Keshavarzi,
Andrew Turner
Andrew Turner
Andrew Turner
Andrew Turner
Andrew Turner
Farid Moore,
Farid Moore,
Farid Moore,
Farid Moore,
Farid Moore,
Farid Moore,
Farid Moore,
Farid Moore,
Farid Moore,
Farid Moore,
Behnam Keshavarzi,
Behnam Keshavarzi,
Behnam Keshavarzi,
Behnam Keshavarzi,
Behnam Keshavarzi,
Behnam Keshavarzi,
Behnam Keshavarzi,
Behnam Keshavarzi,
Behnam Keshavarzi,
Behnam Keshavarzi,
Sajjad Abbasi,
Sajjad Abbasi,
Sajjad Abbasi,
Sajjad Abbasi,
Sajjad Abbasi,
Sajjad Abbasi,
Sajjad Abbasi,
Frank J. Kelly,
Farid Moore,
Frank J. Kelly,
Farid Moore,
Farid Moore,
Sajjad Abbasi,
Frank J. Kelly,
Sajjad Abbasi,
Sajjad Abbasi,
Andrew Turner
Andrew Turner
Farid Moore,
Frank J. Kelly,
Andrew Turner
Sajjad Abbasi,
Sajjad Abbasi,
Andrew Turner
Farid Moore,
Sajjad Abbasi,
Andrew Turner
Farid Moore,
Farid Moore,
Frank J. Kelly,
Sajjad Abbasi,
Sajjad Abbasi,
Frank J. Kelly,
Sajjad Abbasi,
Neemat Jaafarzadeh,
Neemat Jaafarzadeh,
Andrew Turner
Andrew Turner
Neemat Jaafarzadeh,
Neemat Jaafarzadeh,
Andrew Turner
Farid Moore,
Andrew Turner
Ana Oliete Dominguez,
Andrew Turner
Andrew Turner
Andrew Turner
Andrew Turner
Andrew Turner
Sajjad Abbasi,
Neemat Jaafarzadeh,
Frank J. Kelly,
Neemat Jaafarzadeh,
Andrew Turner
Andrew Turner
Neemat Jaafarzadeh,
Neemat Jaafarzadeh,
Andrew Turner
Frank J. Kelly,
Frank J. Kelly,
Frank J. Kelly,
Andrew Turner
Sajjad Abbasi,
Sajjad Abbasi,
Sajjad Abbasi,
Andrew Turner
Andrew Turner
Andrew Turner
Frank J. Kelly,
Andrew Turner
Summary
Researchers collected street dust and air samples from an industrial area in Iran and found significant quantities of microplastics and microrubber particles that could be inhaled or ingested by residents. The particles varied widely in size, color, and polymer type, with concentrations highest near industrial and urban zones. The study provides some of the first evidence that airborne microplastics in terrestrial environments represent a meaningful human exposure pathway.
While the distribution and effects of microplastics (MPs) have been extensively studied in aquatic systems, there exits little information on their occurrence in the terrestrial environment and their potential impacts on human health. In the present study, street dust and suspended dust were collected from the city and county of Asaluyeh, Iran. Samples were characterized by various microscopic techniques (fluorescence, polarized light, SEM) in order to quantify and classify MPs and microrubbers (MRs) in the urban and industrial environments that are potentially ingestible or inhalable by humans. In < 5-mm street dust retrieved from 15 sites, there were an average of 900 MPs and 250 MRs per 15 g of sample, with MPs exhibiting a range of colours and sizes (<100 to >1000 μm). Most street dust samples were dominated by spherical and film-like particles and MRs largely made up of different sizes of black fragments and fibrous particulates. Airborne dust collected daily over an eight-day period at two locations revealed the ubiquity of fibrous MPs of sizes ranging from about 2 μm to 100 μm and an abundance of about 1 per m. These samples contained small MR fragments whose precise characteristics were more difficult to define. Based on the median concentrations in street dust, estimates of acute exposure through ingestion are about 5 and 15 MP d and 2 and 7 MR d for construction workers and young children, respectively. Quantities of inhalable particulates were more difficult to define but the potential toxicity of MPs and MRs taken in by this route was evaluated from assays performed using particulates isolated from street dusts in the presence of an artificial lung fluid. Both types of particle exhibited oxidative potential, with MPs displaying consumptions of different antioxidants that were comparable with corresponding values for a reference urban particulate dust but lower than those for London ambient particulate matter. Thus, MPs and MRs contribute towards the health impacts of urban and industrial dusts but their precise roles remain unclear and warrant further study.