Örzsik Balázs, Palombo Marco, Asllani Iris, Dijk Derk-Jan, Harrison Neil A, Cercignani Mara
Radiology, Leiden University Medical Center, Leiden, the Netherlands; CISC, Brighton and Sussex Medical School, Brighton, United Kingdom.
CUBRIC, Cardiff University, United Kingdom; School of Computer Science and Informatics, Cardiff University, Cardiff, UK.
Neuroimage. 2023 Jul 1;274:120124. doi: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2023.120124. Epub 2023 Apr 20.
The brain has a unique macroscopic waste clearance system, termed the glymphatic system which utilises perivascular tunnels surrounded by astroglia to promote cerebrospinal-interstitial fluid exchange. Rodent studies have demonstrated a marked increase in glymphatic clearance during sleep which has been linked to a sleep-induced expansion of the extracellular space and concomitant reduction in intracellular volume. However, despite being implicated in the pathophysiology of multiple human neurodegenerative disorders, non-invasive techniques for imaging glymphatic clearance in humans are currently limited. Here we acquired multi-shell diffusion weighted MRI (dwMRI) in twenty-one healthy young participants (6 female, 22.3 ± 3.2 years) each scanned twice, once during wakefulness and once during sleep induced by a combination of one night of sleep deprivation and 10 mg of the hypnotic zolpidem 30 min before scanning. To capture hypothesised sleep-associated changes in intra/extracellular space, dwMRI were analysed using higher order diffusion modelling with the prediction that sleep-associated increases in interstitial (extracellular) fluid volume would result in a decrease in diffusion kurtosis, particularly in areas associated with slow wave generation at the onset of sleep. In line with our hypothesis, we observed a global reduction in diffusion kurtosis (t=2.82, p = 0.006) during sleep as well as regional reductions in brain areas associated with slow wave generation during early sleep and default mode network areas that are highly metabolically active during wakefulness. Analysis with a higher-order representation of diffusion (MAP-MRI) further indicated that changes within the intra/extracellular domain rather than membrane permeability likely underpin the observed sleep-associated decrease in kurtosis. These findings identify higher-order modelling of dwMRI as a potential new non-invasive method for imaging glymphatic clearance and extend rodent findings to suggest that sleep is also associated with an increase in interstitial fluid volume in humans.
大脑拥有一个独特的宏观废物清除系统,称为胶质淋巴系统,该系统利用由星形胶质细胞包围的血管周围通道来促进脑脊液与组织间液的交换。啮齿动物研究表明,睡眠期间胶质淋巴清除率显著增加,这与睡眠诱导的细胞外间隙扩大以及细胞内体积的相应减少有关。然而,尽管胶质淋巴清除与多种人类神经退行性疾病的病理生理学有关,但目前用于人类胶质淋巴清除成像的非侵入性技术仍然有限。在此,我们对21名健康年轻参与者(6名女性,22.3±3.2岁)进行了多壳扩散加权磁共振成像(dwMRI),每人扫描两次,一次在清醒时,一次在经过一晚睡眠剥夺并在扫描前30分钟服用10毫克催眠药唑吡坦诱导睡眠期间。为了捕捉假设的与睡眠相关的细胞内/外空间变化,使用高阶扩散模型对dwMRI进行分析,预测与睡眠相关的组织间(细胞外)液体积增加将导致扩散峰度降低,特别是在睡眠开始时与慢波产生相关的区域。与我们的假设一致,我们观察到睡眠期间扩散峰度整体降低(t=2.82,p=0.006),以及在早期睡眠期间与慢波产生相关的脑区和清醒时高代谢活跃的默认模式网络区域的局部降低。使用扩散的高阶表示(MAP-MRI)进行的分析进一步表明,细胞内/外区域内的变化而非膜通透性可能是观察到的与睡眠相关的峰度降低的基础。这些发现确定了dwMRI的高阶模型作为一种潜在的新型非侵入性胶质淋巴清除成像方法,并将啮齿动物的研究结果扩展到表明睡眠也与人类组织间液体积增加有关。