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326

Fucking fantastic. Also, why are we only "learning" about "microplastics" now? They have easily been around for decades and the research/data/etc has been hidden or ignored.

Oh, there is a pro-tip here you don't really want to know about. You can remove microplastics, Forever chemicals and heavy metals from your body by regularly donating blood (blood letting). This has been well established for a few years now. I don't like the idea of someone getting "bad" blood but if they get to live it's better than the gay aids blood so there is that.

Archive: https://archive.today/ubzF5

From the post:

>Scientists have observed for the first time how microplastics move through and block blood vessels in mouse brains, according to research published in Science Advances this week. Using fluorescence imaging, researchers at Peking University tracked plastic particles as they were consumed by immune cells and accumulated in brain blood vessels, causing obstructions that persisted for up to four weeks and reduced blood flow. The study found that these blockages, which behaved similarly to blood clots, decreased the mice's mobility for several days.

Fucking fantastic. Also, why are we only "learning" about "microplastics" now? They have easily been around for decades and the research/data/etc has been hidden or ignored. Oh, there is a pro-tip here you don't really want to know about. You can remove microplastics, Forever chemicals and heavy metals from your body by regularly donating blood (blood letting). This has been well established for a few years now. I don't like the idea of someone getting "bad" blood but if they get to live it's better than the gay aids blood so there is that. Archive: https://archive.today/ubzF5 From the post: >>Scientists have observed for the first time how microplastics move through and block blood vessels in mouse brains, according to research published in Science Advances this week. Using fluorescence imaging, researchers at Peking University tracked plastic particles as they were consumed by immune cells and accumulated in brain blood vessels, causing obstructions that persisted for up to four weeks and reduced blood flow. The study found that these blockages, which behaved similarly to blood clots, decreased the mice's mobility for several days.

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