2024-03-04 12:22:29
Health Sleep
Spring cleaning in the head – This is how the brain frees itself from waste
As of: 1:22 p.m. | Reading time: 3 minutes
When you sleep, the brain is literally flushed
Those: Getty Images/Maria Korneeva
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The nerve cells in the brain constantly produce toxins that it needs to remove. This especially happens when sleeping. Researchers have discovered exactly how this works – and now hope to be able to better treat neurological diseases
What might we do if we didn’t waste so many hours of sleep every day? Not much in the long run – because without sleep the brain would become increasingly poisoned. A research team reports that the coordinated actions of nerve cells literally flush the brain during sleep in the journal “Nature”. Like a kind of synchronized mini-pumps, they generate rhythmic waves that drive fluid through the dense brain tissue and carry away deposits.
Many people associate sleep with rest – but on the contrary, the brain is very busy during these hours, as the team led by Jonathan Kipnis from Washington University in St. Louis explains. The background is that brain cells have energy-intensive tasks: They control thoughts, feelings and body movements and form dynamic networks that are essential for memory formation and problem solving. When nutrients are absorbed, an abundance of metabolic waste is created.
Brains of higher organisms contain billions of neurons with high metabolic rates in complex networks. “It is critical that the brain dispose of metabolic wastes that can accumulate and contribute to neurodegenerative diseases,” Kipnis explained. It was known that sleep is a time of cleansing of toxins and other waste products that have accumulated while awake. “But we didn’t know how this happened.”
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In the body, so-called lymph is transported with waste materials via the lymphatic system, which runs through the body in fine branches. The brain, however, is shielded from the rest of the body by the blood-brain barrier, the boundary between the bloodstream and the central nervous system. Thanks to special cells that lie on the outside of the vessel wall, only certain substances can pass into the brain. This protects the brain from harmful substances and pathogens.
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But there is also a “wastewater system” in the brain, as was discovered just a few years ago. Similar to the lymphatic system, it is a flowing system; the transport fluid is ultimately released into the lymphatic system.
By examining anesthetized and sleeping mice, the researchers found that it is a coordinated activity of neurons that drives the movement of cerebrospinal fluid through the dense brain tissue. The cells generate electrical impulses that condense into rhythmic waves. The waste-laden fluid then drains into the lymphatic vessels in the dura mater – the outer layer of tissue that encases the brain beneath the skull.
“Cleaning method depending on the type of waste”
The researchers also recorded that brain wave patterns change during sleep cycles. “We think that the cleaning process of the brain is similar to washing dishes,” explained lead author Li-Feng Jiang-Xie from Washington University regarding the suspected cause. Large, slow pulses may initially remove easily soluble substances, while small, faster pulses may remove more stubborn deposits – similar to how you scrub away particularly sticky food residue on a plate. “Perhaps the brain adjusts its cleaning method depending on the type and amount of waste,” says Jiang-Xie.
If the team switched off certain brain regions in the mice, the neurons in these regions no longer generated rhythmic waves and no fresh cerebrospinal fluid might flow through, and waste products present there were not removed.
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The scientists hope that the findings gained might provide clues to potential therapies for neurological diseases such as Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s. It is possible that the removal of certain harmful waste might be accelerated in a targeted manner – with the aim of eliminating it before it leads to dire consequences.
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