Recent advances in neuroimaging and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) research have significantly expanded our understanding of the complex interactions between CSF ...
Every 20 seconds, a wave of fresh cerebrospinal fluid rolls into the sleeping brain. These slow, rhythmic blasts, described for the first time in the Nov. 1 Science, may help explain why sleep is so ...
Chiari malformation, an anomaly of the posterior cranial fossa, also known as Arnold–Chiari malformation, was described in autopsies by Hans Chiari, an Austrian pathologist, in 1891. He defined four ...
The space between the arachnoid and pia meningeal layers encasing the brain is a landscape of connective tissue, blood vessels, and cerebrospinal fluid. Scientists debate how that fluid moves within ...
Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) is a clear and watery liquid that flows in and around the brain and spinal cord. Its functions include protecting parts of the nervous system, delivering nutrients and ...
Oct. 21, 2002 — Low-flow cerebroventricular shunting may be worth investigating further in Alzheimer's disease, according to the authors of a pilot study reported in the Oct. 22 issue of Neurology.
Hypogammaglobulinemia in pts receiving rituximab immunotherapy and the impact of rituximab maintenance. Correlation of tumoricidal activity of lenalidomide against hematologic tumor cells with cyclin ...
Morning Overview on MSN
Scientists just watched the brain flush out its own waste during deep sleep — pulsing waves of fluid that may explain why lost sleep wrecks your memory
You wake up after a terrible night of sleep, and the fog is immediate: names slip away, your train of thought derails ...
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