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Lymphatic vessels of the dura mater: a new discovery?
Author(s) -
Bucchieri Fabio,
Farina Felicia,
Zummo Giovanni,
Cappello Francesco
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
journal of anatomy
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.932
H-Index - 118
eISSN - 1469-7580
pISSN - 0021-8782
DOI - 10.1111/joa.12381
Subject(s) - dura mater , lymphatic system , context (archaeology) , pia mater , neuroanatomy , medicine , anatomy , dural venous sinuses , pathology , neuroscience , biology , surgery , paleontology , thrombosis
Dear Editor, Two recent papers (Aspelund et al. 2015; Louveau et al. 2015) reported the presence in mice of lymphatics in the cerebral dura mater, the most external of the meningeal layers covering the brain. This datum was reported as a novel discovery in the fields of neuroanatomy and neuroimmunology. However, for the sake of clarity, we would like to highlight the following issues: 1. The presence of lymphatics in human dura mater has already been described by other authors: the first, to our knowledge, was Mascagni (1787) in his ‘Vasorum lymphaticorum corporis humani historia et ichonographia’ (Fig. 1). More recent reports (Lecco, 1953; Li et al. 1996) have also confirmed this historic observation. 2. The most recent studies (Aspelund et al. 2015; Louveau et al. 2015) did not confute the dogma that lymphatics in the central nervous system (CNS) do not exist. In fact, dura mater is not a component of the neuraxis but covers, along with the other meningeal layers, both the brain and the spinal cord. 3. The so-called blood–brain barrier (BBB) (an anatomical structure that, despite its name, is present in all parts of the neuraxis, with some small exceptions) prevents the formation of transudate (interstitial fluid) in the nervous tissue, thus preventing any change in the volume of these structures that would interfere with the functioning of the nervous cells; e.g. disruption of the BBB is the main cause of cerebral oedema, a very severe pathological condition. As transudate does not form in the CNS, it is not necessary to have any lymphatic vessel in this part of the human body. 4. In the two most recent papers (Aspelund et al. 2015; Louveau et al. 2015), the experiments were performed on mice. Lecco (1953) examined the dura mater of 30 human subjects and found lymphatics structures in four of them. Hence he concluded that these lymphatics probably developed in the dura mater of these subjects for functional reasons, independently of the age of the subjects. 5. Dural lymphatics, when present, can take part in the absorption of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), produced by the choroid plexus, a dedicated region of the CNS cavities (‘ventricles’) covered by ependymal cells, which lack the BBB, and the formation of a transudate is a prerequisite for formation of this fluid. Lymphatic cells may migrate through the ependymal cell layer to the CSF, in turn reaching the dural lymphatics.