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61,005 resultsShowing papers similar to Microplastics in food commodities
ClearFood Contamination by Microplastics and Human Health Implications
This review examines how food is contaminated by microplastics throughout the supply chain — from agricultural soil and irrigation water to food processing and packaging — and evaluates the health implications for human consumers. The authors estimate dietary microplastic intake across food categories and identify seafood, drinking water, and packaged foods as the highest-exposure routes.
Review of micro- and nanoplastic contamination in the food chain
This review examines the contamination of the human food chain with micro- and nanoplastics, from seafood and drinking water to processed foods and packaging. Researchers found that while plastic particles are widely present in food and beverages, the actual health impacts on humans remain largely unknown due to inconsistent study methods. The study calls for standardized analytical approaches to properly assess dietary microplastic exposure and its potential risks.
MICROPLASTICS: Focus on Food and Health
This review covers the presence of microplastics in food and discusses their potential health implications, noting that humans are exposed through seafood, salt, drinking water, and other dietary sources. It summarizes current scientific understanding while acknowledging significant gaps in knowledge about long-term health effects.
Micro- and nano-plastic contamination in foods and potential risk to human health
This review summarizes the current state of knowledge about micro- and nanoplastic contamination in food, covering sources, occurrence, and analytical detection methods. Researchers found that while various foods, especially seafood, contain measurable levels of microplastics, the health risks to humans remain difficult to assess due to inconsistent research methods. The study calls for standardized approaches to better evaluate dietary exposure and potential health impacts.
Microplastics contamination in food and beverages: Direct exposure to humans
This review analyzed 108 studies on microplastic contamination in food and beverages, finding that humans are exposed through seafood, salt, drinking water, bottled water, and packaged foods. Bottled water showed particularly wide-ranging contamination levels of up to 6,292 particles per liter. The study concludes that dietary ingestion of microplastics is a significant and unavoidable exposure route that warrants further investigation.
Microplastic Contamination in the Global Food Supply Chain
This systematic review assessed global microplastic contamination across food supply chain products from 2007 to 2022, including seafood, salt, honey, beer, and bottled water. Virtually all food categories showed microplastic presence, with seafood showing the highest levels and highlighting that diverse dietary sources collectively contribute to daily human plastic ingestion.
Dietary microplastics: Occurrence, exposure and health implications
This review examined the occurrence, human exposure pathways, and health implications of microplastics in food. Researchers found that microplastics have been documented in fishery products, drinking water, sea salt, and other foods, with intestinal absorption considered limited due to particle size. The study suggests that while direct toxicity from ingested microplastics requires further investigation, the chemicals added during plastic manufacturing could potentially cross the intestinal barrier.
Microplastics in food: scoping review on health effects, occurrence, and human exposure
Researchers reviewed evidence on microplastic contamination across many types of food and found that humans may ingest hundreds of thousands of microplastic particles per year through everyday foods including water and salt. The health effects remain unclear, but the widespread contamination creates a basis for ongoing, chronic exposure.
Microplastics in Foods and Beverages
This review examines microplastic contamination across a wide range of food and beverage products, describing the detection techniques used to identify microplastic particles and summarizing findings on which products are most affected. The authors also discuss the potential health consequences of human dietary microplastic ingestion.
Review of micro- and nanoplastic contamination in the food chain
This review examines the contamination of the human food chain by micro- and nanoplastics, covering evidence from seafood, beverages, salt, honey, and other common foods. While environmental impacts of plastics are well-studied, the review highlights how little is known about the actual health consequences for humans consuming these particles.
Microplastics and plastics-associated contaminants in food and beverages; Global trends, concentrations, and human exposure
This review provides a global overview of microplastic contamination in food and beverages, including seafood, salt, honey, sugar, beer, milk, and drinking water. It estimates that humans may consume tens of thousands of microplastic particles per year through their diet, with concentrations varying widely by food type and region. The authors also examine plastics-associated chemicals like phthalates and bisphenol A that can leach from packaging into food, compounding the health risk.
Micro(nano)plastics in commercial foods: A review of their characterization and potential hazards to human health
This review compiles evidence of micro- and nanoplastic contamination found in commercial food products including seafood, beverages, salt, sugar, and honey. Researchers summarize the various laboratory techniques used to isolate, identify, and quantify these particles in food samples. The study highlights that dietary intake is a major route of human microplastic exposure and calls for standardized detection methods to better assess the scope of contamination across the food supply.
Food Contamination with Micro-plastics: Occurrences, Bioavailability,Human Vulnerability, and Prevention
The study reviews the occurrence, bioavailability, and potential health impacts of microplastics in food, noting that contamination has been detected in foodstuffs and beverages worldwide. Researchers highlight that current data on dietary microplastic exposure remains insufficient for comprehensive risk assessment, and call for standardized methodologies to better evaluate the threat to human health.
Microplastics and Nanoplastics in Food
This book chapter reviews the occurrence of microplastics and nanoplastics in food, covering contamination sources across seafood, fresh produce, beverages, and packaged foods, as well as analytical methods for their detection. The authors discuss gaps in exposure data needed for dietary risk assessment.
Microplastics in the human food chain: A review of prevalence, contamination pathways, and mitigation strategies in salt, seafood, and freshwater fish
This review summarizes existing research on microplastic contamination in salt, seafood, and freshwater fish, which are key parts of the human diet worldwide. Microplastics enter these foods through ocean and river pollution, food processing, packaging, and even airborne particles settling on food. Lab studies link microplastic ingestion to inflammation, oxidative stress, and hormone disruption, though direct evidence of health effects in humans is still limited.
Health risks of environmental exposure to microplastics
This review assessed human health risks from environmental microplastic exposure, focusing on dietary intake as the primary route of exposure. The authors highlighted concerns about microplastics in seafood, drinking water, and other foods, and reviewed evidence for potential toxic, inflammatory, and endocrine-disrupting effects.
Faculty Opinions recommendation of Human Consumption of Microplastics.
A peer review endorsing a landmark study that quantified microplastic exposure through the American diet across 26 food categories, finding that Americans may consume tens of thousands of microplastic particles per year. Seafood, beer, and drinking water were identified as notable exposure routes.
Microplastic profusion in food and drinking water: are microplastics becoming a macroproblem?
This review examined the prevalence of microplastics in food and drinking water, assessing trophic transfer along the food web and evaluating whether microplastic contamination in human dietary sources constitutes a growing public health concern.
Microplastics in food products: Prevalence, artificial intelligence based detection, and potential health impacts on humans
Researchers reviewed how microplastics enter the food supply through seafood, salt, bottled beverages, and packaging, finding that ingestion is the main human exposure route and that health risks include immune disruption, neurotoxicity, and potential cancer. The review calls for standardized detection methods, including AI-assisted imaging, and stronger regulations to reduce microplastic contamination in food.
Influence of Micro and Nanoplastics in Modern Food Chain: an Inevitable Intervention
This review examines the growing presence of microplastics and nanoplastics throughout the modern food chain, summarizing known entry points, concentrations in food commodities, and potential health consequences of regular human dietary exposure.
Microplastic in Food and Drinking Water - Environmental Monitoring Data
This review analyzed published monitoring data on microplastic concentrations in food (seafood, honey, beer, table salt) and drinking water (bottled and tap), finding that microplastics are widely present but with highly variable measured concentrations depending on sampling location, methodology, and matrix type. The authors noted the absence of any regulatory standards for microplastics as food or water contaminants and called for standardized detection methods.
Microplastics and Nanoplastics in Food
This review summarized the current evidence on microplastic and nanoplastic contamination in food, covering their sources, analytical detection methods, and potential health implications for consumers. The paper highlighted the rapid growth in food contamination data and the ongoing uncertainties about human dietary exposure levels and health risks.
Microplastics: an emerging threat to food security and human health
This review examines the growing body of evidence showing that microplastics are present in seafood and other food products worldwide, making human dietary exposure virtually unavoidable. Researchers summarize the potential risks to food security and human health from ingesting microplastics and the chemical contaminants they carry. The study identifies significant research gaps and calls for more work on monitoring and eliminating microplastics throughout the food supply chain.
Microplastics in the Food Chain: Food Safety and Environmental Aspects
This review traces how microplastics move through the food chain, from contaminated water and soil into the animals and plants that humans eat. The study highlights that microplastics have been found in seafood, salt, honey, beer, and other food products, raising important questions about food safety and the need for better monitoring of plastic contamination in our food supply.