If I wanted to remove microplastics from my body, I'd do this:
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Read this on Dango.co For the past couple of months, I've been living in Vietnam. I love the country. I love the people. I love the coffee so much that I might need a separate detox just for that. But the one thing I do not love is how everything comes in plastic. They put hot soup in plastic bags. They put newly cooked foods in thin black plastic (which is the worst kind, btw). They put boiling liquids in cups lined with plastic. Most food items have had some contact with plastic. By week 2, I started joking to my wife that I was becoming 50% pho noodle and 50% polyethylene. But microplastics aren't a joke. Microplastics in the body are linked to inflammation, oxidative stress, cancer risk, heart attack, impaired fertility, metabolic and gut disruption, and possible immune and neurological damage. So when I get back stateside, I'm going to run a full detox protocol to reduce the microplastics from my body. If I'm going to do it, I may as well take you through the entire science-based process. I'm going to start with testing, as I want to see how many microplastics are actually circulating in my system after this trip. Then, I will run this protocol for a few months to retest to see what changed. Everything below is exactly what I'm doing and why. You ready? Let's go 🔥
Dan's note #1: Vietnam is not the only country that does this. In fact, all Asian countries that we can think of do some form of this, and we have plenty of microplastic exposure in North America and also in Europe. I don't want to make this like I'm targeting Vietnam because again, I love the country. This is based on the experience I am having living here at this very moment. Dan's note #2: To test for microplastics, just search for your country and microplastic testing at home kit. For most countries, you should be able to find this. I'm using one called Numenor in Canada, but I should preface this by saying this field is still new, and results may not be 100% accurate. The Big Picture: What Is Actually Possible?Before I reveal the protocol, we need to get real. Microplastics and nanoplastics are everywhere. They enter through food, water, air, clothing, dust, packaging, and even cookware. They have been found in stool, blood, placenta samples, arteries, and brain tissue. This tells us two things: Some particles are excreted. Right now, there is no human study showing that any lifestyle protocol removes microplastics embedded inside organs. So the goal is not a magical full-body purge. The goal is to:
For now, this is the realistic framework, and within that framework, there's a lot you can do. Step 1: Reduce Exposure AggressivelyThis is the foundation. If you do not fix this, everything else is like bailing water out of a leaky boat. Water and beverages Food storage and heating Food choices Air and textiles Exposure reduction alone makes a big dent. It is the part that scientists agree on the most. Step 2: Blood And Plasma DonationThis might surprise you, but blood and/or plasma donation is one of the strongest levers we have for lowering circulating contaminants. The cool thing is that some countries pay you to do this (hi Canada 👋🏽). PFAS chemicals, which often travel with microplastics, are found in blood. When high-exposure groups donated plasma regularly, their PFAS levels dropped by roughly 30-40% over a year. Whole blood donation also produced smaller but meaningful reductions. Microplastics and nanoplastics bind to proteins and lipoproteins. So when you donate plasma or blood, you're removing a portion of the contaminated fluid and replacing it with clean fluid from your own body. It is not perfect, and it does not touch microplastics stored in tissues, but it lowers what is circulating at the moment. My plan:
Think of it like draining a dirty aquarium. If you also stop pouring more dirt into it, it can stay clean for longer. Step 3: Optimize Gut ExcretionMost microplastics come in through the gut, and most of the larger ones leave through the gut. My goal is simple: keep things moving and support the barriers so fewer particles slip through. Fiber is the MVP Gut barrier support Microbiome diversity People often ask about binders like chlorella, clay, or charcoal. The human data for microplastics is not strong yet, so I treat these as optional "nice to haves", not essentials. Step 4: Sweat And Kidney DetoxSome plastic-related chemicals appear more easily in sweat than in blood or urine. This means sweating may help remove certain compounds that co-travel with microplastics. In fact, I am doing sauna a couple of times a week while here in Vietnam to do my part to remove these from my body. What I'm doing:
This will remove soluble plasticizers and related chemicals, not the particles themselves. Still, it is a solid lever that improves overall toxin clearing. Step 5: Reduce Inflammation And Oxidative StressNow, even if microplastics stay in the body, you can blunt the harm they cause. This means I'm going to focus on:
This will support your antioxidant systems, protect tissues from oxidative stress. It's really important to keep your blood sugar levels stable, lift weights, prioritize sleep, and avoid smoking and excess alcohol. All these keep inflammation low and vascular health high. The 12 Week Microplastics Removal Template I Am FollowingDaily:
Two to four times weekly:
Every eight to twelve weeks:
Every six to eight weeks (if available):
Ongoing:
The Final WordThis protocol is not perfect. Nothing in the world right now clears microplastics completely. But it is the most evidence-based protocol we have for lowering the amount entering your body, reducing circulating levels, supporting elimination, and protecting your tissues. After a few months in Vietnam drinking coffee out of plastic cups and eating pho on a weekly basis, I am now more motivated than ever. I hope this helps you on your journey to becoming the healthiest version of yourself. Onward and upward. 🚀 - Dan Ps. Do you know anyone else who would benefit from our coaching? We would like to work with more people like you. Would you know any family members or friends who would benefit from our high-performance coaching? If so, please reply to this email, and let's get them started! ReferencesMicroplastics Are Detectable in Human Blood (Detection, Bioaccumulation) Leslie HA, van Velzen MJM, Brandsma SH, et al. Discovery and quantification of plastic particle pollution in human blood. Environ Int. 2022 May;163:107199. doi: 10.1016/j.envint.2022.107199. PMID: 35217024. Liu M, Liu X, Zhang L, et al. Microplastics in human blood: Polymer types, concentrations and detected plastic additives. Environ Int. 2024 Jun 14;185:108569. doi: 10.1016/j.envint.2024.108569. PMID: 38761430. Microplastics Detected in Multiple Human Tissues and Organs Thompson RC, Olsen Y, Mitchell RP, et al. Detection of microplastics in human tissues and organs. Sci Total Environ. 2024. PMID: 11342020 (PMCID: PMC11342020). Ding J, Zhu D, Yang X, et al. Tissue-specific distribution of microplastics in human blood and organs. Sci Total Environ. 2024. PMID: 40882421. Therapeutic Apheresis Can Remove Microplastics from Blood/Plasma Lopatynsky-Reyes EZ, González JF, Enríquez S, et al. Therapeutic apheresis: A promising method to remove microplastics/nanoplastics from human plasma. Pharmaceuticals (Basel). 2025 May 19;18(5):591. doi: 10.3390/ph18050591. PMID: 38328493. [Open access: https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC12162106/] Gasiorowski D, Lange BJ, Lopatynsky-Reyes EZ, et al. Therapeutic apheresis may remove microplastics from the bloodstream. JAMA Netw Open. 2025. PMID: 38328493. Blood and Plasma Donation Reduce PFAS Levels (Blood-Borne Microplastic-Related Chemicals) Gasiorowski D, Leso V, Russo M, et al. Effect of Plasma and Blood Donations on Levels of Perfluoroalkyl and Polyfluoroalkyl Substances (PFASs) in Firefighters. JAMA Netw Open. 2022 Mar 31;5(3):e227761. doi: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2022.7761. PMID: 35394514. Rotander A, Kärrman A, Toms LM, et al. Blood/plasma donation can speed up elimination of per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFASs) from blood. Environ Int. 2021;150:106434. doi: 10.1016/j.envint.2021.106434. PMID: 34224633. Ingested Fiber (and Chitosan) Aids Microplastics Excretion via the Gut Liu D, Chen Z, Zhang Y, et al. Ingesting chitosan can promote excretion of microplastics. Sci Rep. 2025 Apr 22;15(1):96393. doi: 10.1038/s41598-025-96393-w. PMID: 38882801. Teng X, Wang M, Wang Z, et al. Novel probiotics adsorbing and excreting microplastics in vivo and in vitro. NPJ Sci Food. 2025 Jan 9;9(1):5. doi: 10.1038/s41538-024-00226-1. PMCID: PMC11757873. Sweating Increases Excretion of Plasticizers (BPA, Phthalates) Genuis SJ, Beesoon S, Birkholz D, Lobo RA. Human Excretion of Bisphenol A: Blood, Urine, and Sweat Study. BioMed Res Int. 2011;2012:185731. doi: 10.1155/2012/185731. PMCID: PMC3255175. Ma WK, Zhao M, Chen L, et al. Excretion of Ni, Pb, Cu, As, and Hg in Sweat under Two Classical Chinese Medical Therapies. BioMed Res Int. 2022 Apr 3;2022:4291720. doi: 10.1155/2022/4291720. PMCID: PMC8998800. Microplastics Induce Oxidative Stress & Antioxidants Offer Protection Wang X, Li C, Jiang Y, et al. Antioxidant Intervention Against Microplastic Hazards: Pathogenic Pathways and Potential Protective Mechanisms. Environ Sci Ecotechnol. 2025 Jun;26:100770. doi: 10.1016/j.ese.2024.100770. PMCID: PMC12291741. Wang S, Gong Y, Hu W, et al. Antioxidant intervention against microplastic hazards: A review. Sci Total Environ. 2025. PMID: 40722901. Engineered Enzymes and Microbiome Approaches (Experimental, Preclinical) Tang L, Chen Y, Qu Y, et al. Recent advances in microbial and enzymatic engineering for microplastics degradation. Front Microbiol. 2024 Mar 24;15:10961967. doi: 10.3389/fmicb.2024.1211256. PMCID: PMC10961967. Butt T, Ahmad SR, Azam M, et al. Biotechnological methods to remove microplastics: a review. Front Microbiol. 2023 Feb 7;14:9907217. doi: 10.3389/fmicb.2023.9907217. PMCID: PMC9907217. Disclaimer: This email is provided for educational and informational purposes only and does not constitute providing medical advice or professional services. The information provided should not be used for diagnosing or treating a health problem or disease, and those seeking personal medical advice should consult with a licensed physician. |