Microplastics Found in Arterial Plaque — and Linked to Higher Heart Risk
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A landmark study published in the New England Journal of Medicine in early 2024 sent ripples through both the scientific community and the general public. For the first time, researchers detected microplastics and nanoplastics embedded in human arterial plaque — the fatty deposits that build up inside blood vessels and drive cardiovascular disease. More significantly, patients whose plaque contained plastic particles faced a dramatically higher risk of heart attack, stroke, and death over the following three years compared to those whose plaque was plastic-free. It was the first study to link plastic accumulation in human tissue directly to real clinical outcomes.
This article explains what the researchers found, what we currently understand about how microplastics in arterial plaque might raise heart risk, and the evidence-backed steps most likely to reduce your exposure.
What the New England Journal of Medicine Study Found
The study, led by a team at the University of Campania Luigi Vanvitelli in Italy, examined carotid artery plaque samples from 257 patients who had undergone surgery to clear blocked arteries. Using advanced spectrometry techniques, the researchers found microplastics or nanoplastics in the plaque of 150 patients — roughly 58% of the group. The most common plastic detected was polyethylene, followed by polyvinyl chloride (PVC).
The research team then followed all 257 patients for 34 months after surgery, tracking cardiovascular events including heart attack, stroke, and death. Patients whose plaque contained plastic particles were 4.5 times more likely to experience a major cardiovascular event than those with plastic-free plaque. Even after controlling for traditional risk factors — smoking history, cholesterol levels, diabetes, and age — the association between plastic in the plaque and adverse outcomes remained statistically significant and strong.
How Might Plastic in Plaque Raise Cardiovascular Risk?
The study was observational, which means it identified a strong association rather than proving direct causation. It's possible — though less likely — that some unknown third factor correlates both with plastic accumulation and with worse cardiovascular outcomes. However, the researchers proposed two plausible biological mechanisms worth understanding.
The first is inflammation. Microplastic particles in tissue are recognised by the immune system as foreign bodies. This can trigger a chronic low-grade inflammatory response — and inflammation is already a well-established driver of cardiovascular disease and plaque instability. The second mechanism involves the chemical additives carried by plastic particles: compounds like phthalates, bisphenols, and PFAS are known to interfere with endothelial function (the health of blood vessel walls) and lipid metabolism. A particle of plastic in arterial tissue isn't just inert debris — it may be slowly releasing these compounds directly into the vessel wall.
How Do Microplastics Get Into Arterial Plaque?
The route from ingestion to arterial plaque isn't fully mapped, but the picture is becoming clearer. We know from separate research that very small microplastic particles and nanoplastics can cross the gut wall and enter the bloodstream — a 2022 study in Environment International found plastic in the blood of 77% of healthy adult volunteers. From the bloodstream, particles can be carried to virtually any tissue. In arteries affected by atherosclerosis, the process of plaque formation actively traps circulating particles, which may be why plaque — a site of inflammation and cellular activity — appears to be a particularly common accumulation point.
Inhalation is also a relevant entry route. Studies have detected synthetic microfibre particles in deep human lung tissue, and particles reaching the alveoli can cross into systemic circulation. The combination of ingestion and inhalation means that virtually everyone carries some level of microplastic burden in their bloodstream — the question is how much, and how individual biology responds to it over time.
How to Reduce Your Microplastic Exposure — Starting Today
While the science on plastic and heart risk continues to develop, reducing your overall microplastic intake is a straightforward, low-risk response to what the evidence already shows. The biggest gains come from your drinking water and your food contact surfaces — the two most direct routes for plastic ingestion.
The Bottom Line
The discovery of microplastics in arterial plaque — and the association with significantly higher rates of heart attack and stroke — is the most clinically significant microplastic finding published to date. It moves the conversation from abstract environmental concern to measurable, near-term health risk. The study was observational and more research is needed to establish causation, but the signal is strong enough that the precautionary case for reducing plastic exposure is now more compelling than ever. Filtering your drinking water, replacing plastic food contact surfaces, and reducing packaged food intake are evidence-grounded steps with benefits that extend well beyond microplastics alone.
You cannot undo past exposure, but you can meaningfully reduce what's entering your body from today onwards — and that's exactly where it's worth focusing your energy.