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The rodent brain removes waste better during sleep or anesthesia compared with the awake state. Animals exhibit different body posture during the awake and sleep states, which might affect the brain's waste removal efficiency. We investigated the influence of body posture on brainwide transport of inert tracers of anesthetized rodents. The major finding of our study was that waste, including Aβ, removal was most efficient in the lateral position (compared with the prone position), which mimics the natural resting/sleeping position of rodents. Although our finding awaits testing in humans, we speculate that the lateral position during sleep has advantage with regard to the removal of waste products including Aβ, because clinical studies have shown that sleep drives Aβ clearance from the brain.
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Hyun Joo Lee
Yonsei University
Lianshun Xie
Chinese Academy of Sciences
Mei Yu
Versiti Blood Center of Wisconsin
Journal of Neuroscience
University of Rochester
Stony Brook University
NYU Langone Health
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Lee et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69da59df387cf706986868c2 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1523/jneurosci.1625-15.2015
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