Horst D. Deckert

Microplastics Discovered in Penises for the First Time

Microplastics were recently discovered in testicles and sperm samples

Microplastics have been discovered inside male penis tissue for the first time, according to a new scientific study.

Six men experiencing erectile dysfunction had penis samples taken from them, and five contained microplastics. Seven different kinds of plastic were found.

Microplastics are tiny fragments of plastic, usually invisible to the eye, that have been linked to a whole range of health conditions, from gut dysfunction to heart disease and Alzheimer’s. As well as causing physical damage and inflammation, microplastics. They have been found in virtually every human tissue, from lung and gut tissue, to brain tissue.

Microplastics have also been linked to a worldwide fertility decline that could see mankind unable to reproduce by natural means within decades. If sperm counts fall at current rates, by 2045 the median man may produce no sperm at all, meaning one half of all men will be totally infertile and the other half will produce so few sperm that they are functionally so. Microplastics were recently discovered in testicular samples taken as part of a study, and in 100% of semen samples.

MICROPLASTICS DISCOVERED IN 100% OF SEMEN SAMPLES.

A new study has detected microplastics in 100% of semen samples. ? pic.twitter.com/pNqIyNk9pD

— RAW EGG NATIONALIST (@Babygravy9) June 1, 2024

In the case of this new study, the link between erectile dysfunction and the presence of microplastics within the penis is unclear. Studies comparing levels of microplastics in the penises of men with and without erectile dysfunction would be one way to establish a potential link.

It’s also unclear how the microplastics got there in the first place, with the researchers suggesting that they could have infiltrated the subjects’ penises during surgical procedures they had been undergoing to treat their erection problems. Otherwise, the microplastics could simply have arrived in the penis via the blood.

Lead author Ranjith Ramasamy believes further research is urgently needed to identify the reproductive effects of microplastic infiltration of the sex organs.

“We need to identify whether microplastics are linked to ED and if there is a level beyond which it causes pathology and what types of microplastics are pathologic,” he said.

Infowars recently published a detailed primer on microplastics which tells you everything you need to know about microplastics and how to protect yourself against them.


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