A peek inside human brain shows a way it cleans out waste
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[October 08, 2024]
By LAURAN NEERGAARD
WASHINGTON (AP) — A unique peek inside the human brain may help explain
how it clears away waste like the kind that can build up and lead to
Alzheimer’s disease.
Brain cells use a lot of nutrients which means they make a lot of waste.
Scientists have long thought the brain has special plumbing to flush out
cellular trash, especially during sleep – they could see it happening in
mice. But there was only circumstantial evidence of a similar system in
people.
Now researchers have finally spotted that network of tiny waste-clearing
channels in the brains of living people, thanks to a special kind of
imaging.
“I was skeptical,” said Dr. Juan Piantino of Oregon Health & Science
University, whose team reported the findings Monday. “We needed this
piece to say this happens in humans, too.”
The study was published in the journal Proceedings of the National
Academy of Sciences.
The brain is remarkably active during sleep. One reason seems to be
that's the time it does a deep clean. And that's gotten attention
because while losing a good night’s sleep muddles people’s thinking,
chronic sleep deprivation also is considered a risk factor for dementia.
So how does the brain cleanse itself?
Over a decade ago, scientists at the University of Rochester first
reported finding a network they dubbed the “glymphatic system."
Cerebrospinal fluid uses channels surrounding blood vessels to get deep
into tissue and move waste until it exits the brain. When mice were
injected with a chief Alzheimer’s culprit named beta-amyloid, it cleared
away faster when the animals were sleeping.
It’s not clear exactly how that network works although some research has
shown the pulsing of the blood vessels helps move the waste-clearing
fluid where it needs go.
But it’s been hard to find that system in people. Regular MRI scans can
spot some of those fluid-filled channels but don't show their function,
Piantino said.
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This undated photo provided by the Oregon Health & Science
University in October 2024 shows Drs. Erin Yamamoto, left, and Juan
Piantino, who used special imaging to spot a long-suspected pathway
the human brain uses to clear waste. (Christine Torres Hicks/OHSU
via AP)
So his team in Oregon injected a
tracer into five patients who were undergoing brain surgery and
needed a more advanced form of MRI. The tracer “lit up” under those
scans and sure enough, 24 to 48 hours later, it wasn’t moving
randomly through the brain but via those channels just like prior
research had found in mice.
It’s a small but potentially important study that Rochester’s Dr.
Maiken Nedergaard predicted will increase interest in how brain
waste clearance connects to people’s health.
But to test if better sleep or other treatments might really spur
waste clearance and improve health, “I have to be able to measure
glymphatic function in people,” added Dr. Jeff Iliff of the
University of Washington, who helped pioneer waste-clearance
research. The question is whether the new study might point to ways
of measuring.
Sleep isn’t the only question. For example, animal studies show an
old blood pressure drug now used to treat PTSD may improve
glymphatic function, and Iliff and colleague Dr. Elaine Peskind are
about to study it in certain patients.
Additional larger studies in healthy people are needed and Piantino,
whose lab focuses on sleep health, wants to find an easier, more
noninvasive test.
“We cannot study all these questions by injecting people,” he said.
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