Background: Perivascular spaces (PVSs) carry cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) around the brain, facilitating healthy waste clearance. Measuring those flows in vivo is difficult, and often impossible, because PVSs are small, so accurate modeling is essential for understanding brain clearance. The most important parameter for modeling flow in a PVS is its hydraulic resistance, defined as the ratio of pressure drop to volume flow rate, which depends on its size and shape. In particular, the local resistance per unit length varies along a PVS and depends on variations in the local cross section.
Methods: Using segmented, three-dimensional images of pial PVSs in mice, we performed fluid dynamical simulations to calculate the resistance per unit length. We applied extended lubrication theory to elucidate the difference between the calculated resistance and the expected resistance assuming a uniform flow. We tested four different approximation methods, and a novel correction factor to determine how to accurately estimate resistance per unit length with low computational cost. To assess the impact of assuming unidirectional flow, we also considered a circular duct whose cross-sectional area varied sinusoidally along its length.
Results: We found that modeling a PVS as a series of short ducts with uniform flow, and numerically solving for the flow in each, yields good resistance estimates at low cost. If the second derivative of area with respect to axial location is less than 2, error is typically less than 15%, and can be reduced further with our correction factor. To make estimates with even lower cost, we found that instead of solving for the resistance numerically, the well-known resistance of a circular duct could be scaled by a shape factor. As long as the aspect ratio of the cross section was less than 0.7, the additional error was less than 10%.
Conclusions: Neglecting off-axis velocity components underestimates the average resistance, but the error can be reduced with a simple correction factor. These results could increase the accuracy of future models of brain-wide and local CSF flow, enabling better prediction of clearance, for example, as it varies with age, brain state, and pathological conditions.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12987-023-00505-5 | DOI Listing |
J Am Chem Soc
January 2025
Leiden Institute of Chemistry, Leiden University, Einsteinweg 55, 2333 CC Leiden, The Netherlands.
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View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ ECT
January 2025
Division of Biology and Genetics, Department of Molecular and Translational Medicine, University of Brescia, Brescia.
Objectives: Electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) is one of the most effective treatments for treatment-resistant depression (TRD), even though the molecular mechanisms underlying its efficacy remain largely unclear. This study aimed, for the first time, to analyze plasma levels of miRNAs, key regulators of gene expression, in TRD patients undergoing ECT to investigate potential changes during treatment and their associations with symptom improvement.
Methods: The study involved 27 TRD patients who underwent ECT.
J ECT
December 2024
From the Department of Clinical and Experimental Medicine, University Hospital of Pisa, Pisa, Italy.
Autoimmune encephalitis (AE) tends to manifest as a mixture of neuropsychiatric and somatic symptoms, either of which may predominate, and often shows a progressive clinical course sometimes leading to life-threatening conditions. Catatonic and psychotic syndromes, regardless of whether associated with dysautonomia, are common manifestations of AE, especially concerning the anti-NMDAR subtype. Several autoantibodies targeting different neuronal epitopes have been linked to specific clinical manifestations and their detection is embedded in some of the diagnostic criteria for AE.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMicrob Genom
January 2025
Center for Infectious Disease Control (CIb), National Institute for Public Health and the Environment (RIVM), Bilthoven, Netherlands.
Genes encoding OXA-48-like carbapenem-hydrolyzing enzymes are often located on plasmids and are abundant among carbapenemase-producing (CPE) worldwide. After a large plasmid-mediated outbreak in 2011, routine screening of patients at risk of CPE carriage on admission and every 7 days during hospitalization was implemented in a large hospital in the Netherlands. The objective of this study was to investigate the dynamics of the hospitals' 2011 outbreak-associated plasmid among CPE collected from 2011 to 2021.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMicrobiol Spectr
January 2025
Instituto de Medicina Tropical Alexander von Humboldt, Universidad Peruana Cayetano Heredia, Lima, Peru.
The emergence of carbapenem-resistant (CRKP) poses a significant public health threat, particularly in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) with limited surveillance and treatment options. This study examines the genetic diversity, resistance patterns, and transmission dynamics of 66 CRKP isolates recovered over 5 years (2015-2019) after the first case of CRKP was identified at a tertiary care hospital in Lima, Peru. Our findings reveal a shift from to as the dominant carbapenemase gene after 2017.
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