Humans inhale a credit card's worth of microplastics every week. Here's where it ends up.

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Humans inhale a credit card's worth of microplastics every week. Here's where it ends up.
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Researchers used a computer model to find where the roughly 16.2 bits of microplastics inhaled by humans a week end up. What they found is troubling.

Humans may be inhaling a credit card’s worth of toxic microplastics every week, and for the first time scientists have worked out where it ends up in your body.

Microplastics are tiny chunks of plastic debris measuring less than 0.2 inch long, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration . These broken-down remnants of industrial waste and consumer goods are impossible to avoid; they can be found across the ocean and the atmosphere, inside bottled water and even in human poop.There have been few studies into how toxic microplastics impact human health, especially respiratory health.

The scientists built a computer model to analyze where the tiny chunks tend to travel inside our airways, and where they get deposited. Microplastics can also carry viruses, bacteria and other hazardous chemicals, which hitchhike on the plastic’s microscopic surfaces.

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