Crew Anatomy textbooks are not updated too often these days. After the advent of the microscope, physiologists were quick to slice, dice, stain, map, and draw every square millimeter of the human body—and within a few short decades, there was seemingly nothing left to explore. So it was a major geek-out moment for biology lovers when Jeffrey Iliff and his team at the University of Rochester discovered what could rightly be called an uncharted organ —th e glymphatic system.
This system forcefully pushes cerebrospinal fluid through the brain while we sleep, providing a free power-wash for our brains every single night. In the rest of the body, the lymphatic system is a physical structure that collects white blood cells and debris and slowly transfers them from the tissues to the bloodstream and lymph nodes (those swollen lumps under your chin when you get a bad cold are activated lymph nodes).
But unlike the lymphatic system, the glymphatic system doesn’t have a full system of channels and nodes. Because the brain must squeeze into a hard cavity, there isn’t room for a large physical network. Instead, the channels of the glymphatic system piggyback on the drainage system of the arteries that supply the brain. In an economical and elegant appropriation of the arterial system for its own uses, the glymphatic system takes over the brain during sleep, causing these ducts to swell up to 60 percent while the neurons themselves shrink to make way for the street-cleaning fluid.
And in a final coup, the system commandeers the arteries’ pulsations as a way to massage the fluid through the system. I’ve already mentioned amyloid, the mischievous protein that clumps together and forms plaques in Alzheimer’s disease. We all generate this protein, and the glymphatic system helps to dispose of waste and prevent amyloid accumulation.
Finally
The system is particularly active during the deep, slow-wave phase of sleep, but unfortunately, today’s sleep patterns (and our diets) negatively affect this activity. Thus, poor sleep is associated with greater amounts of amyloid plaque in the brain. 5 We theorize that by optimizing our sleep, we may help these proteins get cleared away before they ever cause problems.