2022
DOI: 10.1111/psyg.12839
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Brain ventricles, CSF and cognition: a narrative review

Abstract: The brain ventricles are structures that have been related to cognition since antiquity. They are essential components in the development and maintenance of brain functions. The aging process runs with the enlargement of ventricles and is related to a less selective blood‐cerebrospinal fluid barrier and then a more toxic cerebrospinal fluid environment. The study of brain ventricles as a biological marker of aging is promissing because they are structures easily identified in neuroimaging studies, present good… Show more

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Cited by 3 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…Careful stereological approaches, however, have demonstrated neuronal loss in medial thalamus, mammillary bodies, pons, consistent evidence for systematic, age-related volume increases in spaces filled with cerebrospinal fluid (CSF)-i.e., sulci, fissures, and ventricles-that occur at the expense of gray matter and may accelerate with older age. [195][196][197][198][199][200][201] Brain gray matter structures exhibit differential patterns of aging, with convergent longitudinal data indicating an excessive vulnerability of prefrontal cortex. [202][203][204][205][206] Age-related volume deficits in thalamus and cerebellum occur at a slower rate than declines in cortical gray matter.…”
Section: Postmortem Neuropathologymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Careful stereological approaches, however, have demonstrated neuronal loss in medial thalamus, mammillary bodies, pons, consistent evidence for systematic, age-related volume increases in spaces filled with cerebrospinal fluid (CSF)-i.e., sulci, fissures, and ventricles-that occur at the expense of gray matter and may accelerate with older age. [195][196][197][198][199][200][201] Brain gray matter structures exhibit differential patterns of aging, with convergent longitudinal data indicating an excessive vulnerability of prefrontal cortex. [202][203][204][205][206] Age-related volume deficits in thalamus and cerebellum occur at a slower rate than declines in cortical gray matter.…”
Section: Postmortem Neuropathologymentioning
confidence: 99%