
Brain cerebrospinal fluid flow
Author(s) -
Douglas H. Kelley
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
physical review fluids
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.244
H-Index - 37
eISSN - 2469-9918
pISSN - 2469-990X
DOI - 10.1103/physrevfluids.6.070501
Subject(s) - cerebrospinal fluid , neuroscience , glymphatic system , fluid dynamics , stroke (engine) , medicine , mechanics , biology , physics , engineering , mechanical engineering
Cerebrospinal fluid flows around and into the brain, driven by intricate mechanisms, with profound implications for human health. According to the glymphatic hypothesis, in physiological conditions, cerebrospinal fluid flows primarily during sleep and serves to remove metabolic wastes like the amyloid-beta and tau proteins whose accumulation is believed to cause Alzheimer's disease. This paper reviews one research team's recent in vivo experiments and theoretical studies to better understand the fluid dynamics of brain cerebrospinal fluid flow. Driving mechanisms are considered, particularly arterial pulsation. Flow correlates closely with artery motion and changes when artery motion is manipulated. Though there are discrepancies between in vivo observations and predictions from simulations and theoretical studies of the mechanism, realistic boundary conditions bring closer agreement. Vessel shapes are considered, and have elongation that minimizes their hydraulic resistance, perhaps through evolutionary optimization. The pathological condition of stroke is considered. Much tissue damage after stroke is caused by swelling, and there is now strong evidence that early swelling is caused not by fluid from blood, as is commonly thought, but by cerebrospinal fluid. Finally, drug delivery is considered, and demonstrations show the glymphatic system could quickly deliver drugs across the blood-brain barrier. The paper closes with a discussion of future opportunities in the fast-changing field of brain fluid dynamics.