Scientists have found a way to boost the brain’s system to clear waste from the organ in mice, which could open treatment possibilities for neurodegenerative diseases
By Carissa Wong
4 June 2025
Magnetic resonance imaging scan of a human brain
Phanie/Sipa Press/Alamy
A device that massages the face and neck boosts the brain’s waste disposal system, suggesting it could reduce the severity of conditions like Alzheimer’s disease.
Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) bathes our brain, pumped into it before exiting the brain and passing into a network of thin tubes called lymphatic vessels. Studies in mice have shown that this fluid flushes out waste products made by brain cells, including beta-amyloid, a protein linked to conditions such as Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s disease.
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This has spurred scientists to wonder whether enhancing the flow of CSF could boost brain health. But lymphatic vessels that drain CSF have previously only been identified deep in the neck, making them hard to manipulate, says Gou Young Koh at the Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology in South Korea.
Now, Koh and his colleagues have found a network of lymphatic vessels around 5 millimetres below the skin on the face and neck of mice and monkeys. They made the discovery by injecting the animals with a fluorescent dye that labels CSF and imaging them under anaesthesia. “We used a different type of anaesthesia than used in prior studies – the anaesthesia other studies used blocked the detection of the vessels nearer the skin,” says Koh.
To see whether massaging these vessels could boost CSF flow, the researchers built a device with a small rod attached to a 1-centimetre-wide cotton ball. They used it to stroke downwards along the face and neck of older mice, aged around 2 years, and younger mice that were a few months old, for a minute. “Gently massaging down the face and upper neck can push the fluid down, enhancing the CSF flow,” says Koh.