
What science REALLY thinks of Orlando Bloom's wacky blood cleaning procedure
The particles—which have been linked to cancer—have been found in human blood, semen, lungs, breast milk, bone marrow, placenta, testicles and even the brain.
Scientists have also discovered traces of the tiny plastics fragments, measuring less than 5mm, everywhere from the ice in Antarctica to the summit of Mount Everest.
But when actor Orlando Bloom, 48, was pictured having a £10,000 treatment last month to remove microplastics from his blood, it thrust the subject back into the spotlight.
The 48-year-old, who once wrote that his morning routine involved having 'brain octane oil' for breakfast and 20 minutes of Buddhist chanting, praised the London clinic's two-hour treatment.
Bloom, who starred in film franchises like Lord of the Rings and Pirates of the Caribbean, hailed it as a 'new way of removing microplastics and toxic chemicals from our bodies'.
However, dozens of experts have since expressed scepticism regarding the claims of Clarify Clinic's, arguing that the basement clinic just off Harley Street, has little 'reliable evidence' for how effective the procedure is.
Fresh research, however, has now suggested there may other anti-aging benefits to the method, known medically as a blood plasma exchange.
So what is the truth? And should we really be worried about microplastics in the blood?
A blood plasma exchange works by extracting blood from the arm, where it is then separated into its different components, red blood cells and plasma.
Plasma is the pale yellow liquid that carries blood cells, proteins, and other substances throughout the body.
This plasma is cleansed of 'forever chemicals, microplastics, inflammation and the poisons and toxins', according to Clarify Clinic's co-founder David Cohen, before it is put back in the body with the red blood cells.
This is similar, in principle, to an approach used by the NHS to treat conditions such as myeloma, multiple sclerosis and some types of leukaemia to remove abnormal proteins and harmful substances from the blood.
But like all medical procedures it carries potential risks.
Common side effects can include nausea, fatigue and dizziness. More serious, although rare reactions include infections from bacterial contamination and patients can also suffer electrolyte imbalances that can make them ill.
For this reason, the benefits of the procedure are believed to only outweigh the risks for life-threatening medical conditions.
Additionally, using the technique as form of blood-washing for microplastics has not been tested in randomised trials.
Professor Edzard Ernst, a world-renowned expert in complementary medicine at the University of Exeter, said: 'I am not aware of reliable evidence showing that the procedure has any of the claimed effects on human health.
'I am not even sure that it removes anything from the patient other than a lot of cash.'
British medic Dr Michael Mrozinski, who boasts over 94,000 followers on Instagram account where he calls out 'medical misinformation' also took aim at the practice.
'Orlando Bloom paid thousands for a "microplastic detox" where his blood was filtered through plastic tubing, using plastic cannulas, into a plastic machine, to remove microplastics,' he said.
'You couldn't script this better if you tried. The wellness industry has officially eaten itself.'
Dr Dan Baumgardt, a GP and senior lecturer in the school of physiology, pharmacology and neuroscience at the University of Bristol, also told The Times: 'Any procedure requiring intravenous cannulation and separation of blood constituents is not going to be risk-free.
'Simple cannulation carries a risk of infection, haematoma and extravasation [the leakage of fluid from a vein into the surrounding tissue], and with any procedure it's important that the risks don't outweigh the intended benefits.'
A spokesperson for Clarify Clinic said: 'The biological plausibility of removing synthetic particles from circulation, and their known contributions to inflammation and toxicity, provides a clear scientific rationale.'
No larger clinical trials assessing blood plasma exchange impact on microplastics, specifically, have yet been carried out.
One recent trial, however, has found it could slow biological ageing.
The small study of 42 participants, discovered that those who underwent the treatment over the course of a few months had lower concentrations of biological compounds that accumulate with age, compared with a control group.
This essentially means they were ageing more slowly, keeping their biological age lower.
Writing in the journal Aging Cell, US researchers said: this is the first study in humans to report a decrease in biological age by blood plasma exchange using well-validated epigenetic metrics of biological age.'
The trial, however, was sponsored by Circulate Health, a plasma exchange startup.
Although wary of the idea of microplastic blood detoxing, experts have repeatedly raised the alarm over people's increased exposure to microplastics.
Invisible to the human eye, microplastics are tiny plastic fragments as small as two micrometres, or two-thousandths of a millimetre.
These particles make their way into food, water supplies and even into the air as plastic products degrade over time.
Studies have suggested that they could lodge in sensitive blood vessels and trigger heart attacks, or cause Alzheimer's disease if they get in the brain.
However, other experts have argued scientists are still not measuring microplastic levels correctly.
In a commentary published in the journal Nature earlier this year, four scientists said human tissue samples may be being contaminated from the plastic test tubes and dishes used in laboratories.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


BBC News
22 minutes ago
- BBC News
Study shows specialised care delays stroke symptoms
A rare condition which can cause early-onset strokes can be delayed by up to five years following specialist care, a study has found. The national Cerebral Autosomal Dominant Arteriopathy with Subcortical Infarcts and Leukoencephalopathy, (CADASIL) clinic based at Addenbrooke's Hospital in Cambridge supports people suspected to have the condition and their families. The genetic condition affects small blood vessels throughout the body, increasing the risk of bleeds, including bleeds in the brain, leading to a Hugh Markus, consultant neurologist, said: "It means a lot to see that the work we are doing to improve awareness and diagnosis appears to be having a positive impact. Known as CADASIL, the condition can cause early-onset strokes and increased risk of dementia. It can often affect multiple members of the same family with a 50% chance of it being passed on to children. People with CADASIL, may experience multiple strokes which can start between the ages of 30 to 60 and can go on to experience migraines and dementia. Many people affected by the condition are supported by the specialist clinic based in Cambridge. Led by Prof Markus, a study looked at 555 people who had been referred to the clinic between 2001 and 2023 where awareness and understanding of the condition and specialist care has improved. The study found patients referred to the clinic before 2016 experienced their first stroke between the ages of 37 and 56 whereas those referred after that time typically did not start getting strokes until almost five years later between the ages of 42 and 61. Glenn Bate from near Diss, Norfolk, is a patient of the clinic and was diagnosed with CADASIL following a stroke in 2015. The 69-year-old who is also a trustee at CADASIL Support UK, said having a stroke "changed everything". "When I first left hospital I had problems with walking, balance and anxiety, it felt like I was going home to die. "Having a stroke changed everything in my life - I had to relearn everything. I couldn't drive, and I felt like my life was over."Attending the clinic at Addenbrooke's Hospital, he said it also supported him with his mental health."When you're diagnosed, the possibility of having more strokes can be really scary. "It's fantastic to know that people like me are now living longer without experiencing strokes."It means we're not just living longer but getting a better quality of life," he said. Follow Cambridgeshire news on BBC Sounds, Facebook, Instagram and X.


BBC News
22 minutes ago
- BBC News
Targeted breast cancer treatment 'transformational', say experts
More targeted and less aggressive radiotherapy for low-risk breast cancer could spare thousands of women the harsh side effects of the treatment, a trial has Import Low trial, led by The Institute of Cancer Research, London, and the University of Cambridge, found limiting radiation to the tumour area, rather than treating the whole breast, was just as study included 2,018 women across 30 radiotherapy centres in the UK, who were monitored for 10 years after technique, which has since been adopted by the NHS, has "transformed" the way the disease is treated in its early stages, researchers said. More than 37,000 women have radiotherapy for breast cancer in the UK every treatment uses radiation to kill cancer cells and is usually given after surgery to reduce the risk of the disease coming back but has a number of side Import Low trial compared three radiotherapy approaches - whole breast, partial breast and a reduced a decade, cancer recurrence rates in the group given partial radiotherapy was 3%, the same proportion as those who had been treated with a more aggressive who had targeted radiotherapy were also less likely to experience long-term changes in breast 15% reported noticeable changes at five years compared with 27% in the whole-breast radiotherapy group. Hilary Stobart, now 70, was diagnosed with breast cancer in December 2008, with a 2cm tumour in her left Stobart, who was 54 at the time, was offered the chance to take part in the trial after surgery and was treated with partial radiotherapy."I had three weeks of radiotherapy but suffered no side effects, other than some soreness in my breast and nipple in the first few weeks," she said."Ten years on, I am doing fine. "Whilst I may have had some niggling worries in the early days, having seen the results of the trial, I feel positive and optimistic now. "I know that I was lucky enough back then to have had the best treatment, a treatment that other women will be routinely offered now."Charlotte Coles, chief investigator of the Import Low study, said the trial had "transformed" how early breast cancer is treated."By targeting the area around the tumour, rather than the whole breast, we have demonstrated that patients can achieve the same outstanding long-term outcomes with fewer complications," Prof Coles said."This approach is now widely adopted across the NHS, sparing thousands of women from unnecessary radiation exposure, the professor of breast cancer clinical oncology at the University of Cambridge added. Dr Anna Kirby, consultant clinical oncologist at The Royal Marsden NHS Foundation Trust, said: "The long term results of this study confirm that a less aggressive approach, limiting radiotherapy to the tumour rather than the whole breast, is just as effective as traditional whole breast radiotherapy."Patients receiving partial breast radiotherapy experience fewer side effects while maintaining excellent cancer control."It is hoped that more than 9,000 women in the UK could benefit from more targeted treatment. Follow Cambridgeshire news on BBC Sounds, Facebook, Instagram and X.


BBC News
an hour ago
- BBC News
'Short break respite care saved my family,' says Harrogate parent
A single parent whose son has complex needs has thanked respite foster carers for "saving my mental health and keeping my family together". Teresa, from Harrogate, North Yorkshire, said without the short breaks with carers that were organised for her youngest son Ryan, who has autism and learning disabilities, he would not have been able to continue living with her."I didn't want Ryan in care at all, I wanted to do it all myself and be a good mother, but if I hadn't had the respite foster care I wouldn't have coped to be honest," she Yorkshire Council said it was looking for dozens of new foster carers in the region. Mother-of-two Teresa, who has anxiety and depression, said she had previously felt "alone and isolated" as a parent. "I didn't have any family support, it's hard enough without a child with additional needs," she said. Fostering North Yorkshire, a not-for-profit organisation, arranged for a short breaks carer to get to know the family. Over a period of four years, the carer looked after Ryan during regular short stays, overnight and day visits."I could sleep properly, I could eat properly, things other people take for granted," Teresa said."It helped me get my energy back to be the best parent for Ryan when he came back."She added: "It restored my confidence and sense of identity - I could be Teresa again."Foster carers are given an allowance to help pay for the child's food and other requirements, but they are also usually paid fees on top, to recognise their time and Appleby, head of placement services for North Yorkshire Council, said: "We are probably looking for about 30 to 40 extra carers, specifically around short term arrangements, at any one time. "All carers are allocated a social worker to support and prepare them and the amount of time a carer offers varies - it might be once a week or more than that."She added: "We're always looking to welcome new carers into the amazing North Yorkshire foster care community." Heather Woolley, 59, who has recently started as a short breaks foster carer, said: "A child might come to me after school for a couple of hours, stay and have tea with me, or they might stay overnight and leave the next morning."Ms Woolley, who is from Scarborough and worked in special education for 16 years, said her experience made her a good match for the role."I've had positive feedback from the families as it's given them the time to spend with other siblings, which they don't normally get to do," she is no set foster carer payment as it depended on a range of factors, North Yorkshire Council said. These include how many children are being fostered, their needs and requirements and the carer's skill set."I'm here today bringing Ryan up, and I don't think that would have happened if I hadn't had this really important, valuable service," Teresa said. Listen to highlights from North Yorkshire on BBC Sounds, catch up with the latest episode of Look North.