Close Menu
Truth Republican
  • Home
  • News
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Guns & Gear
  • Healthy Tips
  • Prepping & Survival
  • Videos
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Truth Republican
  • Home
  • News
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Guns & Gear
  • Healthy Tips
  • Prepping & Survival
  • Videos
Newsletter
Truth Republican
You are at:Home»Prepping & Survival»Study Finds Microplastics in Human Brain Tissues Linked to Dementia and Cardiovascular Risk
Prepping & Survival

Study Finds Microplastics in Human Brain Tissues Linked to Dementia and Cardiovascular Risk

Buddy DoyleBy Buddy DoyleJune 9, 2026No Comments5 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr WhatsApp
Study Finds Microplastics in Human Brain Tissues Linked to Dementia and Cardiovascular Risk
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

This article was originally published by Edison Reed at Natural News. 

An international team of researchers reported finding microplastic particles in human brain tissue at concentrations seven to thirty times higher than in the liver or kidneys, according to a Perspective published May 5, 2026, in the journal Brain Health. Researchers from the University of New Mexico, the University of Ottawa, Technische Universität Dresden, and King’s College London analyzed tissue samples from donors between 2016 and 2024 and observed a 50% increase in plastic burden over that period, with the highest levels found in donors diagnosed with dementia.

The findings prompted the authors to describe microplastic contamination in the brain as a medical emergency, the report stated.

Brain Tissue Analysis Details

Researchers examined brain, liver, and kidney samples from human donors and found that polyethylene in nanoscale shard-like fragments was the predominant plastic type, officials said. The concentration in brain tissue was seven to thirty times higher than in matched liver or kidney samples, and the cumulative plastic burden in brain tissue rose approximately 50% from 2016 to 2024, the report stated. Donors with diagnosed dementia carried the heaviest plastic loads, according to the study authors.

A separate body of evidence has shown that microplastics can infiltrate human organs, including the brain, liver, and bloodstream, and are linked to a range of chronic diseases, according to an article by Ava Grace [1]. Another study found that microplastics and nanoplastics affect a specific protein in the brain, causing changes associated with Parkinson’s disease and some types of dementia, according to a report from NaturalNews.com [2]. Polyethylene, the dominant material found in the brain samples, is the same plastic used in food packaging and bottles, researchers noted.

Cardiovascular Risk Findings

Separate data from patients undergoing surgery for blocked carotid arteries showed microplastics and nanoplastics present in arterial plaque, researchers said. Patients whose plaque tested positive for these particles faced a roughly fourfold increase in the combined risk of heart attack, stroke, or death over 34 weeks of follow-up, according to the report. The authors noted that stroke is a brain outcome, linking the cardiovascular findings directly to neurological risk, according to the Perspective.

The presence of microplastics and nanoplastics in arterial plaques was linked to increased inflammation, according to an analysis of the evidence from a Trends Journal report [3]. Chronic inflammation is a hallmark of most chronic diseases, not just cardiovascular disease, suggesting that plastic exposure could exacerbate or increase susceptibility to a wide variety of conditions, that report stated. Nanoplastics, due to their small size, can migrate through tissues of the digestive tract or lungs into the bloodstream, invading individual cells and tissues in major organs, according to that same analysis [3].

Routes of Exposure and Mechanisms

Research demonstrated that nanoscale polystyrene particles administered orally crossed the blood-brain barrier within two hours, while larger particles did not, the report stated. Ultra-processed foods, representing more than half of U.S. caloric intake, were identified as a high-volume route of microplastic delivery from packaging and industrial processing, researchers said. A meta-analysis of 385,541 participants found that the highest ultra-processed food intake was associated with a 53% higher odds of common mental disorder symptoms, while a separate UK study linked a 10% rise in ultra-processed food consumption to a 16% increase in cognitive impairment risk and an 8% increase in stroke risk, according to the report.

Plastic food packaging — bottles, containers, and wrappers — sheds microplastics and nanoplastics into food and drinks, with studies revealing up to 240,000 particles per liter of bottled water, according to an article by Ava Grace [1]. Another analysis noted that rain washes other chemicals from land into the ocean, where they cling to microplastics, and that chemicals such as DDT and PCBs can attach to these particles, according to the book “You Are Eating Plastic Every Day” by Danielle Smith-Llera [4]. A review of dietary choices published in April 2026 found that ultra-processed foods and bottled beverages are associated with higher microplastic levels, while dietary fiber, antioxidants, and probiotics may help mitigate harm, according to a report on NaturalNews.com [5].

Clinical and Public Health Implications

Lead author Dr. Julio Licinio stated that treating microplastic contamination as a peripheral environmental concern, given that the brain carries more plastic than any other organ, has become difficult to defend. The researchers noted that Western medicine has produced no clinical guidance, dietary recommendations, or standard testing protocols for plastic burden in the body, according to the Perspective. The authors called for immediate attention to the issue, using the term “emergency” to describe the magnitude of the findings, the report stated.

In April 2026, Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. announced a $144 million federal initiative aimed at tackling microplastic contamination in the human body, according to a report on NaturalNews.com [6]. The Systematic Targeting Of MicroPlastics (STOMP) program, spearheaded by the Advanced Research Projects Agency for Health (ARPA-H), will focus on measuring, researching, and ultimately removing microplastics and nanoplastics from human tissues, that report stated. Kennedy said the problem is not a distant or theoretical threat, according to the announcement.

References

    1. Ava Grace. “Plastic Food Packaging Contaminates What You Eat and Drink, Study Reveals”. NaturalNews.com. July 28, 2025.
    2. NaturalNews.com. “Study links micro and nanoplastics to Parkinson’s and dementia”. February 05, 2024.
    3. Trends-Journal-2024-05-19.
    4. Danielle Smith-Llera. “You Are Eating Plastic Every Day”.
    5. NaturalNews.com. “Review Identifies Dietary Choices That May Reduce Microplastic Exposure”. May 04, 2026.
    6. NaturalNews.com. “Federal government allocates $144 million to combat microplastic threat in human bodies”. April 05, 2026.

Read the full article here

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Previous ArticleLARRY KUDLOW: From General Jack Keane — 10 to 14 days to return to military operations
Next Article Insane Pro Camping Gear Dropping THIS WEEK On AMAZON

Related Articles

Israel Launches New Strikes Against Lebanon While Trump Claims Iran Deal Is Close

Israel Launches New Strikes Against Lebanon While Trump Claims Iran Deal Is Close

June 9, 2026
NATO Launches New Task Force In The Arctic

NATO Launches New Task Force In The Arctic

June 9, 2026
Three New Vaccine Candidates For Ebola Are Being “Fast-Tracked”

Three New Vaccine Candidates For Ebola Are Being “Fast-Tracked”

June 9, 2026
Global FURY: Negative Views of Israel Skyrocket As The Iran War Deepens International Isolation

Global FURY: Negative Views of Israel Skyrocket As The Iran War Deepens International Isolation

June 9, 2026
The Ogallala Aquifer Is Dying – As The Largest Supply Of Groundwater In The United States Vanishes

The Ogallala Aquifer Is Dying – As The Largest Supply Of Groundwater In The United States Vanishes

June 8, 2026
US Military Blew Up A Boy Scout Balloon With A 0,000 Missile

US Military Blew Up A Boy Scout Balloon With A $500,000 Missile

June 8, 2026
Ebola Cases Now Top 500, With More Than 90 Deaths Recorded

Ebola Cases Now Top 500, With More Than 90 Deaths Recorded

June 8, 2026
Canada BANS Imports Of US Livestock Over Flesh-Eating Parasite Concerns

Canada BANS Imports Of US Livestock Over Flesh-Eating Parasite Concerns

June 8, 2026
The Affordability Crisis Is a Sovereign Debt Problem

The Affordability Crisis Is a Sovereign Debt Problem

June 7, 2026
Don't Miss
Most Unexpected Tactical Guns Just Revealed for SHOT Show 2026!

Most Unexpected Tactical Guns Just Revealed for SHOT Show 2026!

Platner holdout floats emergency lifeline for panicking Dems if scandal-plagued candidate wins

Platner holdout floats emergency lifeline for panicking Dems if scandal-plagued candidate wins

Rob Gronkowski is ‘Team USA all the way’ despite being a soccer novice ahead of 2026 FIFA World Cup

Rob Gronkowski is ‘Team USA all the way’ despite being a soccer novice ahead of 2026 FIFA World Cup

Insane Pro Camping Gear Dropping THIS WEEK On AMAZON

Insane Pro Camping Gear Dropping THIS WEEK On AMAZON

Latest News
LARRY KUDLOW: From General Jack Keane — 10 to 14 days to return to military operations

LARRY KUDLOW: From General Jack Keane — 10 to 14 days to return to military operations

June 9, 2026
Trump locks in ICE funding through end of presidency after House passes B package

Trump locks in ICE funding through end of presidency after House passes $70B package

June 9, 2026
Beau Bridges says Tom Cruise ‘gets better with age’ as ‘Top Gun’ star keeps defying Hollywood odds

Beau Bridges says Tom Cruise ‘gets better with age’ as ‘Top Gun’ star keeps defying Hollywood odds

June 9, 2026
Red Cross Drops BOMBSHELL List of 10 Foods You MUST Stockpile NOW!

Red Cross Drops BOMBSHELL List of 10 Foods You MUST Stockpile NOW!

June 9, 2026
Amazon-sold infant nursing pillows recalled over potentially deadly suffocation risk

Amazon-sold infant nursing pillows recalled over potentially deadly suffocation risk

June 9, 2026
Copyright © 2026. Truth Republican. All rights reserved.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • Contact

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.