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61,005 resultsShowing papers similar to Impact of microplastics and nanoplastics on cardiovascular health
ClearMicroplastics and nanoplastics: emerging threats to cardiovascular health – a comprehensive review
This comprehensive review examines the emerging evidence linking microplastic and nanoplastic exposure to cardiovascular health problems. The evidence suggests that plastic particles may contribute to heart and blood vessel disease, though more research is needed to fully understand the long-term effects. The review highlights the urgent need for further studies on how chronic exposure to these tiny particles affects the cardiovascular system.
Evidence, Mechanisms, and Clinical Implications of Microplastics and Nanoplastics As Emerging Cardiovascular Risk Factors: A Narrative Review
This review examines growing evidence that micro- and nanoplastics may contribute to cardiovascular health risks, with researchers having found these particles in human artery plaques and blood clots. Evidence indicates that the particles can enter the bloodstream, trigger inflammation, damage blood vessel walls, and potentially increase the risk of heart attacks and strokes. While the evidence is not yet conclusive, the study highlights an emerging area of concern that warrants further investigation into how everyday plastic exposure may affect heart and blood vessel health.
Micro and Nano-plastic particles: What are they and do they effect cardiovascular health?
This review examines the cardiovascular health effects of micro- and nanoplastics, summarizing evidence that these particles have been detected in human tissues including arterial plaques and may promote endothelial dysfunction and inflammation. The authors call for further clinical and epidemiological research into cardiac risk.
Nanoplastics as emerging cardiovascular hazards: a narrative review of current evidence
This review examines the emerging evidence that nanoplastics may pose risks to cardiovascular health. Researchers summarized studies showing that nanoplastics can enter the bloodstream through ingestion, inhalation, and skin contact, potentially causing inflammation and oxidative damage to blood vessels and heart tissue. The study suggests that nanoplastic exposure represents an understudied but potentially significant environmental risk factor for heart and vascular problems.
Microplastics and Nanoplastics
Researchers examined the connection between microplastics and nanoplastics and cardiovascular disease, a group of conditions affecting the heart and blood vessels. Growing evidence suggests these tiny plastic particles may pose risks to heart and vascular health.
Micro- and nanoplastics: A new cardiovascular risk factor?
This review examines the growing evidence that micro- and nanoplastics may pose risks to the heart and blood vessels. Studies in animals and cell cultures show that these tiny plastic particles can enter the bloodstream, trigger inflammation, promote blood clotting, and damage blood vessel walls. While human data is still limited, the review suggests that micro- and nanoplastic exposure should be considered a potential new risk factor for cardiovascular disease.
Microplastics and Cardiovascular Disease: Should Clinicians Be Paying Attention?
This clinical review summarizes evidence for microplastics as a cardiovascular risk factor, noting that they have been detected in human cardiovascular tissues and that in vitro and animal studies link them to oxidative stress, endothelial dysfunction, and platelet disruption, while cautioning that human evidence remains associative.
Microplastics, Nanoplastics and Heart Contamination: The Hidden Threat
This review examines growing evidence that micro- and nanoplastics can accumulate in human cardiovascular tissues, including blood, heart muscle, and arterial plaques. Researchers found that these particles may contribute to heart and blood vessel problems through inflammation, oxidative stress, blood clotting, and direct tissue injury. The study identifies plastic particles as a potential new environmental risk factor for cardiovascular health.
Micro- and nanoplastics in the cardiovascular system: current evidence, research gaps: a systematic review
This systematic review examined how microplastics and nanoplastics affect the heart and blood vessels. Studies in both animals and human tissue found that these particles can cause blood vessel inflammation, disrupt heart function, and were even linked to higher rates of heart attack and stroke in people with plastic particles in their arteries.
Micro-nanoplastics and cardiovascular diseases: evidence and perspectives
Growing evidence suggests that micro- and nanoplastic particles may be a previously unrecognized risk factor for heart disease, as they have been detected in atherosclerotic plaques, heart tissue, and blood clots in humans. Lab studies show these particles can trigger oxidative stress, promote blood clotting, and cause inflammation in blood vessel cells, and their presence in artery plaques has been linked to higher rates of cardiovascular events.
Emerging cardiovascular risks of micro- and nanoplastics: toxic effects and mechanistic pathways
Tiny plastic particles called micro- and nanoplastics are getting into our bodies through food, air, and skin contact, and researchers have found them building up in people's hearts and blood vessels. This review of existing studies shows these plastic bits may contribute to heart disease by causing inflammation and damaging cells in the cardiovascular system. While more research is needed, this suggests that plastic pollution isn't just an environmental problem—it could be directly harming our heart health.
Influence of Micro- and Nanoplastics on Mitochondrial Function in the Cardiovascular System: A Review of the Current Literature
This review examined the limited but growing research on how micro- and nanoplastics may affect mitochondrial function in the cardiovascular system. Researchers noted that these plastic particles can trigger oxidative stress and disrupt normal mitochondrial processes, which are critical for heart and blood vessel health. The study highlights the need for more comprehensive research given the rising levels of plastic particle contamination and the importance of mitochondrial health in preventing cardiovascular problems.
Impacts of micro- and nanoplastic exposure on the cardiovascular system: a systematic review focused on in vivo studies
This systematic review summarizes 38 animal studies on how micro- and nanoplastics affect the heart and blood vessels. The research found that these tiny plastic particles can deposit in cardiovascular tissue, trigger inflammation and oxidative stress, and cause structural damage, raising concerns about potential heart health risks from ongoing plastic exposure.
Micro-nanoplastic induced cardiovascular disease and dysfunction: a scoping review
Researchers reviewed evidence from animal and human studies on how micro- and nanoplastics (MNPs) affect the heart and blood vessels, finding that MNPs can damage the inner lining of blood vessels, promote plaque buildup, and interfere with blood clotting — all of which raise the risk of heart disease. The review calls for more research to understand how much MNP accumulation occurs in the human cardiovascular system and what it means for long-term cardiac health.
Cardiotoxicity of Microplastics: An Emerging Cardiovascular Risk Factor
This review examines emerging evidence that microplastics may pose risks to cardiovascular health, summarizing findings from laboratory and animal studies. Researchers found that microplastic exposure has been linked to inflammation, oxidative stress, and disrupted heart function in experimental settings. Given that cardiovascular disease is already the leading cause of death globally, the study suggests that microplastics as a potential contributing factor warrant urgent further investigation.
Micro(nano)plastics: an Emerging Burden for Human Health
This review summarizes recent research on how micro- and nanoplastics affect human health, noting that these particles have been found accumulating in the cardiovascular, nervous, reproductive, and digestive systems. The evidence points to oxidative stress and inflammation as key mechanisms of harm, with recent human studies now providing direct evidence of cardiovascular toxic effects from plastic particle exposure.
Microplastics and nanoplastics in cardiovascular disease—a narrative review with worrying links
This review summarizes growing evidence linking micro- and nanoplastic exposure to cardiovascular disease, including increased blood pressure, blood vessel inflammation, and heart muscle damage observed in animal studies. Human population studies also show that people exposed to more plastics face higher rates of hypertension and heart attacks, though researchers are still working to understand the exact biological mechanisms involved.
Progress in Research on Microplastics and Nano-plastics Cardiac Toxicity
This review covers experimental and clinical evidence on the cardiovascular toxicity of microplastics and nanoplastics, documenting effects on heart function, vascular integrity, and inflammation pathways. It calls for more human clinical data to clarify the dose-response relationship and the relevance of laboratory findings to real-world cardiac risk.
Microplastics: A Modifiable Cardiac Risk Factor
This review examines the emerging evidence linking microplastic exposure to cardiovascular disease risk factors, including oxidative stress, inflammation, endothelial dysfunction, and thrombosis. The study highlights that micro- and nanoplastics have been identified in coronary artery plaque, suggesting that microplastic exposure may represent a modifiable but currently underrecognized cardiac risk factor.
Micro-nanoplastic induced cardiovascular disease and dysfunction: a scoping review
This scoping review examined evidence linking micro- and nanoplastic exposure to cardiovascular disease and dysfunction, summarizing findings from animal and in vitro studies and identifying plausible mechanisms including inflammation and oxidative stress.
Tiny trouble: microplastics, nanoplastics, and their heartfelt impact on cardiovascular health
This review summarizes growing evidence that microplastics and nanoplastics have been found in human heart tissue, arterial plaques, and blood, and may increase the risk of cardiovascular disease. Lab studies show these particles can damage blood vessel walls, disrupt cholesterol processing, trigger inflammation, and promote blood clot formation, raising serious concerns about heart health.
Environmental microplastic and nanoplastic: Exposure routes and effects on coagulation and the cardiovascular system
This review explores how environmental microplastic and nanoplastic particles may affect blood coagulation and the cardiovascular system in humans. Researchers summarized evidence suggesting that plastic particles can enter the body through ingestion, inhalation, and skin contact, potentially triggering inflammatory responses in blood vessels. The study highlights the need for more research on how chronic exposure to these tiny plastic particles may contribute to cardiovascular health risks.
Micro/nano-plastics impacts in cardiovascular systems across species
This review summarizes research across multiple species showing that microplastics and nanoplastics can damage the cardiovascular system, causing blood clots, blood vessel injury, and heart problems in lab animals. Since these tiny particles have been found in human blood and can travel throughout the body, the findings raise serious concerns about the long-term heart health effects of microplastic exposure in people.
Plastic particle impacts on the cardiovascular system and angiogenesis potential
This review examines emerging evidence on how micro- and nanoplastic particles may affect the cardiovascular system. Researchers found that these particles can potentially cross biological barriers and reach cardiovascular tissues, where they may interact with cellular components and amplify the toxicity of other co-occurring contaminants.