There is a hypothesis that augmentation of the drainage and clearing function of the meningeal lymphatic vessels (MLVs) might be a promising therapeutic target for preventing neurological diseases. Here we investigate mechanisms of photobiomodulation (PBM, 1267 nm) of lymphatic drainage and clearance. Our results obtained at optical coherence tomography (OCT) give strong evidence that low PBM doses (5 and 10 J/cm 2 ) stimulate drainage function of the lymphatic vessels via vasodilation (OCT data on the mesenteric lymphatics) and stimulation of lymphatic clearance (OCT data on clearance of gold nanorods from the brain) that was supported by confocal imaging of clearance of FITC-dextran from the cortex via MLVs. We assume that PBM-mediated relaxation of the lymphatic vessels can be possible mechanisms underlying increasing the permeability of the lymphatic endothelium that allows molecules transported by the lymphatic vessels and explain PBM stimulation of lymphatic drainage and clearance. These findings open new strategies for the stimulation of MLVs functions and non-pharmacological therapy of brain diseases.
The recently rediscovered meningeal lymphatic system (MLS) opens new insight into pathways of brain clearing and drainage functions that play an important role in neurorehabilitation. The development of breakthrough strategies for augmentation of MLS might be a promising therapeutic target for preventing of neurological diseases. Here we demonstrate photostimulation (PS, 1268 nm) of clearing and drainage function of MLS in healthy male mice. We uncover PS‐mediated increase of the mesenteric lymphatic permeability to fluorescent macrophages via a decrease of expression of tight junction and transendothelial resistance. In sum, our results clearly show PS stimulation of meningeal clearing and drainage functions as well as effects of PS on permeability of the lymphatic endothelium to macrophages. These findings open new strategies for alternative nonpharmacological therapy of brain diseases via PS modulation of lymphatic mechanisms of the homeostasis of central nervous system.
A new approach for detection oscillatory patterns and estimation of their dynamics based by a modified CWT skeleton method is presented. The method opens up additional perspectives for the analysis of subtle changes in the oscillatory activity of complex nonstationary signals. The method was applied to analyze unique experimental signals obtained in usual conditions and after the non-invasive increase in the blood–brain barrier (BBB) permeability in 10 male Wistar rats. The results of the wavelet-analysis of electrocorticography (ECoG) recorded in a normal physiological state and after an increase in the BBB permeability of animals demonstrate significant changes between these states during wakefulness of animals and an essential smoothing of these differences during sleep. Sleep is closely related to the processes of observed changes in the BBB permeability.
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