Microplastic detection methods in human tissue are fundamentally flawed, with fat content producing false positives that invalidate claims of plastic accumulation in organs. The brain's 60% fat composition explains why studies report tenfold higher "plastic" levels compared to liver, not actual contamination. Rushed research, lacking proper contamination controls and validation, has created biologically implausible results that misguide policy.
Brain microplastic concentrations reflect real human exposure, not analytical artifacts. Multiple studies using Py-GC/MS and µ-FTIR, combined with rigorous QA/QC and independent verification, confirm nanoplastics in blood and organs. While methods are still improving, variability and interference concerns are acknowledged and addressed by researchers, and the observed trends align with environmental plastic growth, not just tissue fat.
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