• AmbroisindeMontaigu
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    701 month ago

    The problem might be that if they’re everywhere there’s no control group without them, so it’s hard to say if an effect is actually caused by microplastics or not.

    • @piecat@lemmy.world
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      191 month ago

      In a laboratory setting, presumably you could makeq conditions clean enough to grow a cell culture that is free from micro plastics. But that isn’t going to tell you much about systemic effects like in an organ or body.

      Maybe you could breed mice in a clean room. Not sure what the generational half life of microplastics is…

      The alternative you could probably test is levels of Microplastics. Grow a number of colonies with varying levels of microplastics and compare between them.

      • @aesthelete@lemmy.world
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        1 month ago

        I have a hypothesis that the proliferation of microplastics could be related to the rising cancer rates in young people nobody can yet explain.

        At very least, people should stop microwaving plastic containers.

      • @theneverfox
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        11 month ago

        Don’t forget the food… And the water, and the water used to grow the food, etc. Creating a clean generation of even mice would be pretty difficult, it’s just everywhere, including most of the tools we’d use to make a cleanroom