How Indoor Microplastics Can Impact Overall Human Health
12 May 2026
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How Indoor Microplastics Can Impact Overall Human Health
Spokesperson : Dr. Hari Kishan Boorugu, Consultant Physician & Infectious Disease Specialist, Yashoda Hospitals, Hyderabad
What Are Microplastics?
Microplastics are usually produced intentionally or generated when large synthetic polymer products, such as plastic packaging, are not properly disposed of or treated. Once formed, microplastics are often exposed to the environment where they can decompose. In general, microplastics are synthetic polymer compounds that form when large plastic materials are fragmented and micronized to a size less than 5 mm.
Entry Into the Human Body
Microplastics can enter the human body via inhalation or ingestion and translocate to the bloodstream, distributing across multiple organs. Evidence from human tissue analysis and animal models supports accumulation in organs such as the lungs, liver, kidneys, brain, and reproductive organs. While this appears to be an emerging threat to human health, the extent of damage caused by microplastics is still unclear due to limited statistics and data.
Challenges in Estimating Health Impact
It is difficult to estimate the effect of microplastics on health because of various confounding factors. For example, if someone has kidney damage, there are many possible causes, and microplastics may be just one contributor. Therefore, determining how much microplastics alone lead to health hazards is challenging.
Small-Sized Microplastics and Nanoplastics
Microplastics smaller than 10 micrometres, especially nanoplastics, can cross epithelial barriers in the lungs and gut through various processes. They accumulate in organs such as the lungs, liver, kidneys, brain, and reproductive organs.
Evidence From Human and Animal Studies
Human studies have detected microplastics in blood, placenta, and tissues. Animal data also show spread to the heart, spleen, and fetus. Various cellular mechanisms explain how microplastics cause organ damage, including the induction of reactive oxygen species and mitochondrial dysfunction.
Indoor Exposure Risks
Chronic indoor microplastic exposure via high airborne levels heightens risk due to prolonged inhalation in enclosed spaces. Because enclosed spaces trap particles, concentrations tend to be higher. Cardiovascular effects include clotting and worsening of atherosclerosis. Long-term exposure may also be associated with insulin resistance, metabolic issues such as lipid dysregulation, altered immune responses, and increased inflammation.
Environmental Sources and Long-Term Risks
Microplastics from the environment can enter the body via inhalation or ingestion, directly or through processed food items. Emerging evidence links long-term exposure to cancer, infertility, and developmental disorders.
Vulnerable Populations
Children, the elderly, and pregnant women are at increased risk.
Children: High exposure at a young age may lead to developmental issues.
Elderly and chronically ill patients: Impaired clearance mechanisms increase vulnerability.
Pregnant women: High exposure may cause ill effects for both mother and fetus.
So, it is important, especially in indoors, that we reduce the sources like synthetic drugs or we use air filters. It is difficult to monitor the extent of exposure but there seems to be emerging data that microplastics seem to be associated with some health hazards. Thank you.
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