Nature Communications (Sep 2023)

Photostimulation of brain lymphatics in male newborn and adult rodents for therapy of intraventricular hemorrhage

  • Dongyu Li,
  • Shaojun Liu,
  • Tingting Yu,
  • Zhang Liu,
  • Silin Sun,
  • Denis Bragin,
  • Alexander Shirokov,
  • Nikita Navolokin,
  • Olga Bragina,
  • Zhengwu Hu,
  • Jürgen Kurths,
  • Ivan Fedosov,
  • Inna Blokhina,
  • Alexander Dubrovski,
  • Alexander Khorovodov,
  • Andrey Terskov,
  • Maria Tzoy,
  • Oxana Semyachkina-Glushkovskaya,
  • Dan Zhu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-023-41710-y
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1
pp. 1 – 20

Abstract

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Abstract Intraventricular hemorrhage is one of the most fatal forms of brain injury that is a common complication of premature infants. However, the therapy of this type of hemorrhage is limited, and new strategies are needed to reduce hematoma expansion. Here we show that the meningeal lymphatics is a pathway to remove red blood cells from the brain’s ventricular system of male human, adult and newborn rodents and is a target for non-invasive transcranial near infrared photobiomodulation. Our results uncover the clinical significance of phototherapy of intraventricular hemorrhage in 4-day old male rat pups that have the brain similar to a preterm human brain. The course of phototherapy in newborn rats provides fast recovery after intraventricular hemorrhage due to photo-improvements of lymphatic drainage and clearing functions. These findings shed light on the mechanisms of phototherapy of intraventricular hemorrhage that can be a clinically relevant technology for treatment of neonatal intracerebral bleedings.