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The widespread use of plastic has caused microplastic to be recognized as an emerging pollutant and a serious concern. Microplastics in water have been investigated in various studies, a review of which can be useful in different aspects of this issue. This review showed that the origins of microplastics in water are classified into two main groups including primary microplastic and secondary microplastics. The intensity of pollution of water sources in different countries has been reported from less than one to thousands of microplastics per liter. Finally, drinking water is a concern as a major source of exposure to microplastics, and it is estimated that each adult ingests 0.2-1.2×106 microplastics annually via drinking water. The most important methods of analyzing this pollutant in water include FTIR and Raman spectroscopy. The most important environmental and health risk associated with it is oxidative stress, cytotoxicity, disruption of the energy homeostasis and metabolism, disruption of immune function, neurotoxicity, and cancer. Therefore, provide solutions to reduce the entry of microplastics into water resources, as well as to develop methods to remove them from polluted waters is necessary.
Babaei et al. (Sun,) studied this question.
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