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Human parasagittal dura is a potential neuroimmune interface

Erik Melin, Geir Ringstad, Lars Magnus Valnes, Per Kristian Eide

2023Communications Biology23 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Parasagittal dura (PSD) is located on both sides of the superior sagittal sinus and harbours arachnoid granulations and lymphatic vessels. Efflux of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) to human PSD has recently been shown in vivo. Here we obtain PSD volumes from magnetic resonance images in 76 patients under evaluation for CSF disorders and correlate them to age, sex, intracranial volumes, disease category, sleep quality, and intracranial pressure. In two subgroups, we also analyze tracer dynamics and time to peak tracer level in PSD and blood. PSD volume is not explained by any single assessed variable, but tracer level in PSD is strongly associated with tracer in CSF and brain. Furthermore, peak tracer in PSD occurs far later than peak tracer in blood, implying that PSD is no major efflux route for CSF. These observations may indicate that PSD is more relevant as a neuroimmune interface than as a CSF efflux route.

Topics & Concepts

Cerebrospinal fluidTRACERSuperior sagittal sinusPia materPathologyEffluxSagittal planeAnatomyMagnetic resonance imagingDura materMedicineChemistryBiomedical engineeringInternal medicineRadiologyPhysicsBiochemistryNuclear physicsThrombosisCerebrospinal fluid and hydrocephalusHead and Neck Surgical OncologySpinal Dysraphism and Malformations
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