The aging human brain exhibits reduced cerebrospinal fluid flow during sleep due to both neural and vascular factors
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Aging reduces the quality and quantity of sleep, and greater sleep loss over the lifespan is predictive of neurodegeneration and cognitive decline. One mechanism by which sleep loss could contribute to impaired brain health is through disruption of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) circulation. CSF is the primary waste transport system of the brain, and in young adults, CSF waves are largest during NREM sleep. However, whether sleep-dependent brain fluid physiology changes in aging is not known, due to the technical challenges of performing neuroimaging studies during sleep. We collected simultaneous fast fMRI and EEG data to measure large-scale CSF flow in healthy young and older adults and tested whether there were age-related changes to CSF dynamics during nighttime sleep. We found that sleep-dependent CSF flow was reduced in older adults, and this reduction was linked to impaired frontal EEG delta power and global hemodynamic oscillations during sleep. To identify mechanisms underlying reduced CSF flow, we used sensory and vasoactive stimuli to drive CSF flow in daytime task experiments, and found that both neural and cerebrovascular physiological changes contributed to the disruption of CSF flow during sleep. Finally, we found that this reduction in CSF flow was associated with gray matter atrophy in aging. Together, these results demonstrate that the aging human brain has reduced CSF flow during sleep, and identifies underlying neurovascular mechanisms that contribute to this age-related decline, suggesting targets for future interventions.