Abstract
Purpose of Review: To provide clinicians with a concise introduction of microplastics potential role as a cardiovascular risk factor. Recent Findings: Microplastics have been identified in human cardiovascular tissues. In vitro and animal-based studies associate microplastics presence with increased oxidative stress, endothelial dysfunction, platelet aggregation disruption, and low-grade inflammation. Small human studies report associations between intraplaque or circulating microplastics and cardiovascular outcomes. However, these signals are associative, method-dependent, and vulnerable to exposure misclassification, co-pollutant confounding, contamination, and heterogeneous analytics. Summary: Microplastics are pervasive and biologically plausible as a cardiovascular risk factor, supported by growing in-vitro evidence and incipient human association studies. Cohesive population-level measures to curb MP pollution should be embedded within policies addressing broader environmental cardiovascular risk factors. For clinicians, it remains premature to recommend personal-level mitigation strategies, and MPs are best regarded as an emerging exposure within the patient’s exposome that warrants awareness and further rigorous studies.
| Original language | English (US) |
|---|---|
| Article number | 159 |
| Journal | Current Cardiology Reports |
| Volume | 27 |
| Issue number | 1 |
| DOIs | |
| State | Published - Dec 2025 |
Keywords
- Cardiology
- Environment
- Epidemiology
- Mechanisms
- Microplastics
ASJC Scopus subject areas
- Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine
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