Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 523730221 series 3571506
Content provided by Dr. Bobby Dubois. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Dr. Bobby Dubois or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://staging.podcastplayer.com/legal.

Send us a text

Summary: Microplastics are showing up in our water, food, air—and in human tissues. In this episode, I unpack what the best studies actually show (and don’t), why risk is plausible but not proven, and the realistic steps you can take today without panic.

In this episode, I cover:

  • What microplastics are and why they’re everywhere—from packaging and clothing to tire dust—and why production is still projected to rise ~70% by 2040 (OECD).
    OECD+2
    OECD+2
  • The signal that caught my attention: patients with microplastics in carotid artery plaque had a markedly higher 3-year risk of heart attack, stroke, or death (NEJM). Association, not proof—but concerning.
    The Guardian+3
    New England Journal of Medicine+3
    PubMed+3
  • What’s turning up in the brain: autopsy work suggests rising microplastic loads in brain tissue, though causality remains unknown (Nature Medicine coverage).
    Nature+2
    Nature+2
  • Everyday exposure: a liter of bottled water can contain ~240,000 plastic particles—mostly nanoplastics—using newer detection methods (NIH Research Matters).
    TIME+3
    National Institutes of Health (NIH)+3
    NCBI+3
  • Indoor vs. outdoor air: estimates suggest we inhale tens of thousands of microplastic particles daily, with higher indoor concentrations (PLOS One).
    PLOS+1

My takeaways for you (progress, not perfection):

  • Respect the signal without catastrophizing. Human data are early, but cardiovascular and neurologic signals merit attention.
    New England Journal of Medicine+1
  • Make the easy swaps: store food in glass, don’t microwave plastic, favor loose-leaf tea over plastic-based tea bags, and replace plastic cutting boards with wood or glass. (These trim exposure; they don’t eliminate it.)
  • Air matters: consider a HEPA purifier for main living/sleeping areas and vacuum regularly; natural-fiber clothing sheds fewer synthetic particles.
  • Water choices: where safe, use tap water with a quality home filter and a reusable (non-plastic) bottle—especially given the nanoplastic findings in some bottled waters.
    National Institutes of Health (NIH)

Listener corner: You asked for more quick-hit myth busters (yes, we’ll do “Does chicken soup speed recovery?”), and thanks for the reminder to wear a

  continue reading

Chapters

1. Why Microplastics Matter Now (00:00:00)

2. Show Intro And Listener Feedback (00:02:19)

3. How Plastics Took Over Daily Life (00:04:00)

4. What Counts As Microplastics (00:06:10)

5. Ubiquity In Water, Air, And Food (00:08:15)

6. Evidence Gaps And Early Signals (00:11:00)

7. Lungs, Oceans, And Disease Links (00:13:35)

8. Brain Findings And Vascular Risks (00:16:00)

9. Policy Paths And Hard Tradeoffs (00:19:20)

10. Practical Ways To Cut Exposure (00:21:10)

11. Realistic Expectations And Closing (00:24:10)

60 episodes