The Glymphatic System
- Stephen Whiteside
- Posts: 3784
- Joined: Sat Nov 27, 2010 1:07 pm
- Contact:
The Glymphatic System
The Glymphatic System
I take myself to bed for slumber tight.
My brain removes the toxins, through the night,
That build up as I cogitate all day,
Like piles of rubbish, getting in the way.
I sleep, and all my brain cells start to shrink.
They have no need to contemplate or think.
Spaces open up around each one
Through which my CSF* can start to run.
It washes past my neurons like a tide.
Those chemicals have nowhere they can hide.
Just like debris riding on a river,
They’re carried far away, into my liver,
And there they’re rendered harmless in a jiff
Allowing me another wholesome sniff
Of Life when I awake, and face the dawn,
My mind as fresh and clean as new mown lawn.
Scientists have seen the brains of mice
Work just like this. (I know it isn’t nice
Subjecting them to such experiments,
But it’s useful, so I’m sitting on the fence.)
The brains of mice are very much like ours.
It’s likely human brains would share these powers
To flood themselves, and wash out all the junk
While their owner’s snoozing soundly in their bunk.
*Cerebrospinal fluid
© Stephen Whiteside 20.10.2013
I take myself to bed for slumber tight.
My brain removes the toxins, through the night,
That build up as I cogitate all day,
Like piles of rubbish, getting in the way.
I sleep, and all my brain cells start to shrink.
They have no need to contemplate or think.
Spaces open up around each one
Through which my CSF* can start to run.
It washes past my neurons like a tide.
Those chemicals have nowhere they can hide.
Just like debris riding on a river,
They’re carried far away, into my liver,
And there they’re rendered harmless in a jiff
Allowing me another wholesome sniff
Of Life when I awake, and face the dawn,
My mind as fresh and clean as new mown lawn.
Scientists have seen the brains of mice
Work just like this. (I know it isn’t nice
Subjecting them to such experiments,
But it’s useful, so I’m sitting on the fence.)
The brains of mice are very much like ours.
It’s likely human brains would share these powers
To flood themselves, and wash out all the junk
While their owner’s snoozing soundly in their bunk.
*Cerebrospinal fluid
© Stephen Whiteside 20.10.2013
Last edited by Stephen Whiteside on Sun Oct 20, 2013 7:46 am, edited 1 time in total.
Stephen Whiteside, Australian Poet and Writer
http://www.stephenwhiteside.com.au
http://www.stephenwhiteside.com.au
-
- Posts: 6946
- Joined: Sun Oct 31, 2010 12:08 pm
- Location: Here
Re: The Glymphatic System
Good poem Stephen.
What about dreaming, how does that come into the brain renewal actvity ?

What about dreaming, how does that come into the brain renewal actvity ?
Neville
" Prose is description, poetry is presence " Les Murray.
" Prose is description, poetry is presence " Les Murray.
- Robyn
- Posts: 542
- Joined: Sat Nov 19, 2011 11:21 pm
- Location: Binalong NSW
Re: The Glymphatic System
Fascinating stuff Stephen... makes a really interesting poem!
Robyn Sykes, the Binalong Bard.
- Stephen Whiteside
- Posts: 3784
- Joined: Sat Nov 27, 2010 1:07 pm
- Contact:
Re: The Glymphatic System
Thanks Neville, Robyn.
Yes, I wondered about dreaming too. It wasn't mentioned in the article I read, which is quite interesting in itself.
Yes, I wondered about dreaming too. It wasn't mentioned in the article I read, which is quite interesting in itself.
Stephen Whiteside, Australian Poet and Writer
http://www.stephenwhiteside.com.au
http://www.stephenwhiteside.com.au
- Stephen Whiteside
- Posts: 3784
- Joined: Sat Nov 27, 2010 1:07 pm
- Contact:
Re: The Glymphatic System
I did wonder if somehow dreams were a by-product of shrunken, temporarily dysfunctional brain cells - not a very romantic way to look at dreaming, I know. I'm sure it's all vastly more complicated than that.
Stephen Whiteside, Australian Poet and Writer
http://www.stephenwhiteside.com.au
http://www.stephenwhiteside.com.au
Re: The Glymphatic System
Interesting . . . I read recently they did a study that showed that research causes cancer in rats 

- Stephen Whiteside
- Posts: 3784
- Joined: Sat Nov 27, 2010 1:07 pm
- Contact:
Re: The Glymphatic System
Yeah, but they lost all the data, because they left it out on the bench overnight and the rats ate it.
Stephen Whiteside, Australian Poet and Writer
http://www.stephenwhiteside.com.au
http://www.stephenwhiteside.com.au
- Stephen Whiteside
- Posts: 3784
- Joined: Sat Nov 27, 2010 1:07 pm
- Contact:
Re: The Glymphatic System
Getting back to dreaming, it also occurs to me that if you are woken suddenly from sleep, you can start thinking pretty efficiently pretty quickly if you have to - depending on the stage of sleep you are woken from. For example, I remember being on call for neonatal intensive care, and having to think pretty quickly at 3 in the morning. What happens to the brain cells and the glymphatic system under these circumstances? How quickly can the cells re-expand? How well can they perform in their shrunken state? More research, more mice!
Stephen Whiteside, Australian Poet and Writer
http://www.stephenwhiteside.com.au
http://www.stephenwhiteside.com.au
-
- Posts: 6946
- Joined: Sun Oct 31, 2010 12:08 pm
- Location: Here
Re: The Glymphatic System
This is just guesswork, but I think of dreaming as being like the de-fragmenting function on the computer. It seems to somehow sort out all the clutter and can make the " filing system " of the brain more efficient for finding things stored there. For a while anyway. 

Neville
" Prose is description, poetry is presence " Les Murray.
" Prose is description, poetry is presence " Les Murray.
- Stephen Whiteside
- Posts: 3784
- Joined: Sat Nov 27, 2010 1:07 pm
- Contact:
Re: The Glymphatic System
Don't know much about the de-fragmenting function, Neville.
Stephen Whiteside, Australian Poet and Writer
http://www.stephenwhiteside.com.au
http://www.stephenwhiteside.com.au