Litcius/Paper detail

Glymphatic failure as a final common pathway to dementia

Maiken Nedergaard, Steven A. Goldman

2020Science1,044 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Sleep is evolutionarily conserved across all species, and impaired sleep is a common trait of the diseased brain. Sleep quality decreases as we age, and disruption of the regular sleep architecture is a frequent antecedent to the onset of dementia in neurodegenerative diseases. The glymphatic system, which clears the brain of protein waste products, is mostly active during sleep. Yet the glymphatic system degrades with age, suggesting a causal relationship between sleep disturbance and symptomatic progression in the neurodegenerative dementias. The ties that bind sleep, aging, glymphatic clearance, and protein aggregation have shed new light on the pathogenesis of a broad range of neurodegenerative diseases, for which glymphatic failure may constitute a therapeutically targetable final common pathway.

Topics & Concepts

Glymphatic systemDementiaSleep (system call)PathogenesisNeuroscienceMedicinePsychologyImmunologyPathologyDiseaseCerebrospinal fluidOperating systemComputer scienceCerebrospinal fluid and hydrocephalusNeuroscience of respiration and sleepFetal and Pediatric Neurological Disorders