Changing stroke rehab and research worldwide now.Time is Brain! trillions and trillions of neurons that DIE each day because there are NO effective hyperacute therapies besides tPA(only 12% effective). I have 523 posts on hyperacute therapy, enough for researchers to spend decades proving them out. These are my personal ideas and blog on stroke rehabilitation and stroke research. Do not attempt any of these without checking with your medical provider. Unless you join me in agitating, when you need these therapies they won't be there.

What this blog is for:

My blog is not to help survivors recover, it is to have the 10 million yearly stroke survivors light fires underneath their doctors, stroke hospitals and stroke researchers to get stroke solved. 100% recovery. The stroke medical world is completely failing at that goal, they don't even have it as a goal. Shortly after getting out of the hospital and getting NO information on the process or protocols of stroke rehabilitation and recovery I started searching on the internet and found that no other survivor received useful information. This is an attempt to cover all stroke rehabilitation information that should be readily available to survivors so they can talk with informed knowledge to their medical staff. It lays out what needs to be done to get stroke survivors closer to 100% recovery. It's quite disgusting that this information is not available from every stroke association and doctors group.

Friday, May 1, 2026

The past, present and future of control architectures in lower-limb cable-driven robots for gait rehabilitation

 The only questions to be answered; DO THEY WORK FOR RECOVERY AND WHERE ARE THE PROTOCOLS? Not answering that is complete failure of this research!


The past, present and future of control architectures in lower-limb cable-driven robots for gait rehabilitation

We are providing an unedited version of this manuscript to give early access to its findings. Before final publication, the manuscript will undergo further editing. Please note there may be errors present which affect the content, and all legal disclaimers apply.

Abstract

Due to their high power-to-weight ratio, modular and reconfigurable architectures, and inherent compliance, cable-driven rehabilitation robots (CDRRs) provide safe, lightweight, backdrivable solutions for gait and movement rehabilitation. However, they continue to face unique control challenges due to cable properties and user variability. Following the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) guidelines, this systematic review explores control strategies for lower-limb CDRRs from the past decade. Out of the 968 studies initially identified, 70 met the selection criteria and were classified into six categories: position and velocity, force- and torque-based, compliance-based, model-based and optimal, learning-based and intention-informed, and hierarchical frameworks. Our analysis revealed a chronological evolution from traditional classical control toward more personalized, adaptive, learning-based, and intention-driven methods. Impedance and admittance control remain fundamental for ensuring safety, while newer approaches enable user-specific and environment-responsive assistance. This review proposes a unified hierarchical framework linking high-level intent detection to low-level actuation providing researchers and developers with a structured understanding of the control landscape for cable-driven lower-limb exoskeletons in healthcare and beyond. Control strategies were also linked to clinical outcomes to relate them to functional improvements across patient populations. Advancing CDRRs will require unified, multi-layer architectures that couple constraint-aware model-based control with adaptive and intention-driven learning to achieve safe, scalable, and clinically meaningful rehabilitation.

Hyperbaric oxygen therapy combined with computerized cognitive training improves global cognition and functional independence post-stroke: a randomized controlled trial

Why do HBOT when there are vastly simpler, cheaper and less risky ways to increase oxygen uptake?

 I can't see any use for HBOT unless it's delivered in the first week and there are vastly easier options for delivering oxygen than that.

Google this for risks: hyperbaric oxygen therapy deaths. 

Here are 43 posts on HBOT for your edification

Well, since this has been around for years why the hell doesn't someone actually do human testing and create protocols on stroke recovery?

Earlier research has this line:The drug, which is cheaply available for just $0.16 a day, works by boosting the number of oxygen molecules released into a cell, which in turn seems to benefit the robustness and longevity of the body’s basic building blocks. (This would seem to be much easier and faster than HBOT. I'm requesting this at my next stroke, my doctor won't know what hit her when I tell her how to treat me.)

If your doctor doesn't know about this s/he IS COMPLETELY FUCKING INCOMPETENT? And not creating protocols is even worse, allowing millions to billions of neurons to die because of lack of oxygen during the neuronal cascade of death!

 What other protocols is your doctor using to significantly improve oxygen delivery immediately post stroke? The first hours and days? NOTHING? Then you DON'T have a functioning stroke doctor, do you?

Maybe these, why isn't your incompetent doctor already delivering these to you?

cerebral blood flow (29 posts to July 2016)

Cerebral blood flow autoregulation (1 post to July 2021)

Cerebral Blood Flow Velocity (1 post to Febraury 2020)

cortical oxygenation (1 post to November 2020)

oxygen delivery (20 posts to January 2020)

oxygen uptake (5 posts to August 2013)

Normobaric oxygen (10 posts to January 2020)

  • brain blood flow (3 posts to April 2019)

  •  Oh, your incompetent doctor doesn't have any and doesn't fucking care about learning better ways to get you recovered! Well, fire them! PREDICTING DAMAGE DOES NOTHING!

    The latest here:

    Hyperbaric oxygen therapy combined with computerized cognitive training improves global cognition and functional independence post-stroke: a randomized controlled trial

    We are providing an unedited version of this manuscript to give early access to its findings. Before final publication, the manuscript will undergo further editing. Please note there may be errors present which affect the content, and all legal disclaimers apply.

    Abstract

    Background

    Post-stroke cognitive impairment (PSCI) is prevalent following stroke. Both hyperbaric oxygen therapy (HBOT) and cognitive training have demonstrated efficacy in the treatment of PSCI; however, it remains unclear whether combining HBOT with cognitive training has a synergistic effect on global cognition and functional independence in PSCI.

    Objective

    We aimed to investigate the effects of HBOT combined with computerized cognitive training (CCT) on global cognition and functional independence in patients with PSCI, and to explore associated neural correlates.

    Methods

    In this single-center, randomized controlled clinical trial, 116 patients with PSCI (39 ischemic, 77 hemorrhagic) were randomly assigned to four groups who received HBOT+standard treatment, CCT+standard treatment, combined HBOT + CCT+standard treatment, or standard treatment alone. All groups received 20 treatment sessions over 4 weeks (five sessions/week). Global cognition was assessed before and after treatment using the Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE). Functional independence in basic activities of daily living (ADLs) was assessed using the Barthel Index (BI). Resting-state functional connectivity (FC) was assessed using functional near-infrared spectroscopy.

    Results

    Patients in the HBOT + CCT group showed significantly greater improvements in MMSE total scores, several MMSE subscores, including orientation, registration, attention, recall, and visuospatial, and BI scores, than the other groups (all ts(112) ≥ 2.74, all Bonferroni-corrected ps ≤ 0.043). Resting-state FC between the left dorsolateral prefrontal cortex and left pars triangularis of Broca’s area was significantly higher in the HBOT + CCT group than in the control group (t(111) = 2.93; Bonferroni-corrected p = 0.025). The change in FC was also significantly correlated with MMSE improvement (r(113) = 0.552, p < 0.001).

    Conclusion

    Combined HBOT and CCT may represent a beneficial intervention for patients with PSCI and could be associated with changes in global cognition, functional independence in basic ADLs, and prefrontal functional connectivity.

    Trial registration The study has been listed in the Chinese Clinical Trial Registry (ChiCTR2400080685).

    Thursday, April 30, 2026

    Failure of doctor and therapists in stopping a flying arm when coughing or sneezing

     Having just had bronchitis and spells of coughing fits and sneezing. There is a major decision to make; do you bury you face in your good arm so as to not spread germs over a vast area? Or do you grab the affected arm to prevent elbowing your neighbor on the bus or plane? Both are not possible. Since your doctor and therapists COMPLETELY FUCKING FAILED AT CURING SPASTICITY! Ask them the proper response. The first time that occurred for me was at the kitchen table, buried the mouth in the arm, thus allowing the affected left arm to sweep my complete place setting to the floor, breaking most of it.

    Relationship between lower limb muscle coordination and knee flexion angle during the swing phase of gait in post-stroke individuals

     THIS DOES NOTHING TO GET SURVIVORS RECOVERED! If you can't write EXACT protocols for guaranteed recovery, then get the hell out of stroke! Describing something does nothing for survivors! And you are too blitheringly stupid to see that; along with your mentors and seniors researchers! I'd have you all fired!

    Relationship between lower limb muscle coordination and knee flexion angle during the swing phase of gait in post-stroke individuals

      We are providing an unedited version of this manuscript to give early access to its findings. Before final publication, the manuscript will undergo further editing. Please note there may be errors present which affect the content, and all legal disclaimers apply.

      Abstract

      Background

      Stroke patients with hemiplegia often show inefficient gait patterns, including reduced knee flexion during the swing phase, which may increase fall risk. Post-stroke gait frequently involves merged muscle synergies that affect lower limb kinematics. However, it remains unclear how muscle synergy merging and fractionation relate to knee flexion during the swing phase. Therefore, this study aimed to examine the association between knee flexion during the swing phase and muscle synergy merging and fractionation patterns in patients with stroke.

      Methods

      The study comprised 21 stroke patients with hemiplegia. Surface electromyography was recorded from eight lower-limb muscles on the paretic side during comfortable gait. Maximum knee flexion angle (MKFA) during the swing phase was measured using a markerless motion capture system. Using non-negative matrix factorization, the number of muscle synergies, their spatiotemporal structure were calculated. Participants were classified into a low-synergy group (LS; n = 5; one or two synergies) or a high-synergy group (HS; n = 16; three synergies). Group comparisons of MKFA during the swing phase were performed. Furthermore, we investigated whether muscle synergies of the HS group could be fractionations of those of the LS group.

      Results

      The HS group showed significantly greater MKFA compared with the LS group (p = 0.032). In the HS group, the ankle plantar flexors constituted an independent muscle synergy, whereas in the LS group, these muscles had high weightings within a muscle synergy associated with load response. Furthermore, the independent muscle synergies observed in the HS group were shown to be fractionated from the merged muscle synergies present in the LS group.

      Conclusion

      Our results showed that merged muscle synergies were associated with reduced MKFA during the swing phase, whereas an independent synergy involving the plantar flexors was associated with greater knee flexion. These findings suggest that fractionation of the plantar flexor synergy may be important for improving knee kinematics after stroke and could inform targeted rehabilitation strategies. Given the relatively small and imbalanced sample size, cautious interpretation of the findings is warranted. Further studies with larger, balanced samples are needed to further strengthen the evidence for these findings.

      Monday, April 27, 2026

      Comparative efficacy of motor imagery augmented with central non-invasive brain stimulation versus peripheral electrical stimulation for upper extremity rehabilitation post-stroke: a systematic review and network meta-analysis

       So, our fuckingly incompetent stroke medical 'professionals' STILL HAVEN'T WRITTEN ANY PROTOCOLS TO GET SURVIVORS RECOVERED! WOW! This was totally useless research then! Hope you blithering idiots like not recovering when you become the 1 in 4 per WHO that has a stroke!

      And you've known of motor imagery for HOW LONG AND DONE NOTHING?


      Comparative efficacy of motor imagery augmented with central non-invasive brain stimulation versus peripheral electrical stimulation for upper extremity rehabilitation post-stroke: a systematic review and network meta-analysis

        We are providing an unedited version of this manuscript to give early access to its findings. Before final publication, the manuscript will undergo further editing. Please note there may be errors present which affect the content, and all legal disclaimers apply.

        Abstract

        Background

        Upper limb dysfunction is a common and debilitating consequence of stroke, severely affecting patients’ activities of daily living and quality of life. Motor imagery (MI) has emerged as a promising rehabilitation technique, and its combination with various forms of non-invasive stimulation, both central (e.g., repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation, rTMS; transcranial direct current stimulation, tDCS) and peripheral (e.g., functional electrical stimulation, FES), has been increasingly investigated. While previous meta-analyses have confirmed the general benefit of combined interventions, the relative efficacy of different MI-based combination strategies remains unclear. This systematic review and network meta-analysis aimed to directly and indirectly compare the effectiveness of MI augmented with different non-invasive central or peripheral stimulation modalities for upper extremity recovery post-stroke.

        Methods

        We registered the study on PROSPERO (CRD420251131264) and followed the PRISMA guidelines. Randomized controlled trials (RCTs) were searched in PubMed, Cochrane Library, EMBASE, Scopus, CNKI, and Wanfang databases from inception until August 4, 2025. The included RCTs involved adult stroke patients with upper limb dysfunction receiving MI combined with any non-invasive stimulation. The primary outcome was the change in upper limb motor function measured by the Fugl-Meyer Assessment (FMA or FMA-UE). A frequentist network meta-analysis was performed using random-effects models. Risk of bias was assessed using the Cochrane RoB 2 tool. Subgroup, sensitivity, and meta-regression analyses were conducted to explore heterogeneity.

        Results

        Seventeen RCTs involving 846 participants were included in the systematic review, with 13 studies forming the network for meta-analysis, comparing 9 intervention strategies. Network meta-analysis for the FMA outcome showed that MI combined with low-frequency rTMS (MI-LF-rTMS) showed a statistically significant difference compared to conventional rehabilitation alone (Standardized Mean Difference, SMD = 1.755, 95% CI 0.631 to 2.879, p = 0.002). No other intervention, including MI-tDCS, MI-FES, or any single therapy, showed a statistically significant difference compared to conventional rehabilitation. MI-LF-rTMS also showed a statistically significant difference in upper limb functional activity (Action Research Arm Test). Subgroup analyses indicated that the statistically significant difference for MI-LF-rTMS was also observed across intervention durations ≤ 4 weeks, disease stages ≤ 3 months post-stroke, and in protocols not using brain-computer interface technology. Meta-regression identified that the use of a brain-computer interface, publication year, and patient mean age were significant sources of heterogeneity.

        Conclusion

        Among the intervention strategies evaluated in this network meta-analysis, motor imagery combined with low-frequency repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (MI-LF-rTMS) showed a statistically significant difference compared to conventional rehabilitation. This regimen integrates central neuromodulation with cognitive training and may be a clinically feasible option, particularly for patients in the early phase after stroke. Future research should focus on parameter optimization, mechanistic exploration, and validation in larger, more diverse populations.

        Friday, April 24, 2026

        A just-released study finds that engaging in a brain game could lower your risk of dementia.

        Ask your competent? doctor THE EXACT SPECIFIC GAME AND HOW LONG TO PLAY! Not knowing that is 

        COMPLETE FUCKING INCOMPETENCY! From your doctor, hospital and board of directors; all need to be fired!

        A just-released study finds that engaging in a brain game could lower your risk of dementia

        Study shows some people actually get stronger and sharper with age—here's what they all have in common

         You'll just have to positively assume that this research on pessimism is COMPLETELY WRONG!

        Your competent? doctor will then also confirm that this earlier research is totally wrong! Oh NO, your doctor doesn't know about it, does s/he?

        My positive outlook is over the top; having fun the rest of my life! Currently in Rome, heading towards the Amalfi coast tomorrow.

        Study shows some people actually get stronger and sharper with age—here's what they all have in common

        Fact checked by Nick Blackmer

        • A new study found that adults 65 and older can improve both their physical and cognitive function.
        • People with a positive attitude toward aging were more likely to experience these health improvements.
        • A rosier outlook on growing older makes you more likely to engage in habits that support health.

        One of the most powerful influences on how well you age may be how you feel about it. A recent study that tracked thousands of older adults for over a decade suggests that physical and cognitive improvement is indeed possible with age—and one factor stood out in predicting who might boost functioning over time: mindset. Participants who held more positive views of aging were more likely to improve as they got older, researchers reported in the journal Geriatrics.

        A Deeper Look at the Findings

        Examples of people accomplishing remarkable feats later in life aren’t hard to find. The study points to Diana Nyad, who completed a 110-mile swim from Cuba to Florida at age 64, and Joseph Turner, who produced some of the most influential paintings later in his career.

        The researchers wanted to know whether these kinds of stories are outliers—or part of a broader pattern, according to study author Martin Slade, MPH, PhD, a lecturer in occupational medicine at Yale School of Medicine. They also wondered whether attitude might help explain the difference.

        To answer these questions, the team followed about 11,300 adults ages 65 and older from the Health and Retirement Study over 12 years. They assessed physical and cognitive health using measures like walking speed and cognitive tests, and asked participants about their beliefs around aging.

        By the end of the study, 45.15% of participants showed improvement in cognitive function, physical function, or both. Notably, more positive beliefs around aging were associated with a higher likelihood of improvement. “There are two take-away messages from the study,” Slade said. “First, that the cognition and physical health of older people can improve and, in fact, a significant portion of older people do improve. Second, that positive age beliefs increase the likelihood that an older person’s cognition and physical health will improve over time.”

        The findings come with some caveats, though. Slade noted that the researchers didn’t measure muscle and brain neuron plasticity, making it difficult to know exactly what caused the improvements. And the study didn’t examine which specific behaviors might have resulted from participants’ beliefs, which could help explain the link, pointed out Rosanne M. Leipzig, MD, PhD, a geriatrician and professor at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New York.

        Why Would a Positive Attitude Translate to Better Aging?

        On a basic level, having a positive attitude means you’re more likely to try new things, experts said. “Aging beliefs are self-fulfilling prophecies,” Leipzig said. “What you do is related to what you expect.” In other words, if you don’t see age as a limitation, you’re probably more likely to sign up for a challenging dance class, make new friends, or travel—boosting your physical and mental fitness along the way. It’s that physical movement that’s key, noted Nir Barzilai, MD, a professor of genetics and medicine at Albert Einstein College of Medicine, director of the Institute for Aging Research, and co-founder and president of the Academy for Health and Lifespan Research. Having a positive attitude without positive habits may not make much of a difference, he added.

        The same goes for a doom-and-gloom attitude about aging, which experts said often leads to fewer health-promoting activities. Leipzig has seen this pattern in his own patients. “In my practice, I have seen those with negative age beliefs withdraw, stop engaging, refuse to try adaptations like hearing aids or medical care that might help them have lives that are less isolated and more enjoyable,” he said.

        Optimistic beliefs about aging may even change the brain’s structure, Slade added, increasing the rate at which neurons form new connections later in life. His previous research showed that negative aging beliefs can affect the brain, linking them to biomarkers associated with Alzheimer’s disease.

        How to Have a Rosier Outlook on Aging

        If you take anything away from this study, Barzilai said, it should be that the trajectory of aging is not set in stone. “There’s a flexibility [to it],” he added. 

        Having a positive outlook on your ability to get out into the world, challenge your brain, stay social, and move your body can influence how likely you are to keep doing these things—helping you adopt behaviors that may support a longer, healthier life, experts said.

        So how do you flip a negative outlook into a more rosy one? What’s crucial, Leipzig said, is to try to view the last third of life as a time of possibility rather than inevitable decline. “It can be a time of continuing ability and even improvement for many people,” she noted. “Don’t sabotage yourself with your age beliefs.”

        Barzilai, for his part, practices what he preaches. He recently moved with his wife from a suburban home to bustling Manhattan, where there’s more access to activity and culture. “I’m so busy, and Manhattan is so exciting,” he said.

        Read the original article on Health

        Objectively Measured Daytime Napping Patterns and All-Cause Mortality in Older Adults

         

        It would seen to be better to address why the napping is occurring, NO sleep protocol so maybe not enough rest is achieved the night before. It would help if your doctor actually critically thinks about your napping. Maybe you need coffee napping.

        Objectively Measured Daytime Napping Patterns and All-Cause Mortality in Older Adults


        2026;9;(4):e267938. doi:10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2026.7938
         

        Key Points

         Question  Are objectively measured daytime nap characteristics, including duration, frequency, variability, and timing, associated with all-cause mortality among community-dwelling older adults? Findings In this prospective cohort study of 1338 adults aged 56 years or older, longer and more frequent daytime napping, as well as morning napping, were associated with higher all-cause mortality. Variability in nap duration was not associated with mortality.

        Meaning  The findings suggest longer and more frequent, particularly morning, napping may be a behavioral marker of increased mortality risk in late life, underscoring the potential clinical value of incorporating wearable device–based nap assessments into routine health monitoring.

        Abstract

        Importance  Daytime napping is common among older adults, but evidence linking objective daytime nap patterns to mortality is limited, as prior studies relied largely on self-report. Some daytime nap characteristics, such as timing and variability of nap duration across days, are also understudied.

        Objective  To test whether actigraphy-measured daytime nap duration, frequency, variability, and timing are associated with all-cause mortality.

        Design, Setting, and Participants  This prospective cohort study used data from the population-based Rush Memory and Aging Project, in which the analytic baseline was initiated in August 2005. Participants in this current study were community-dwelling adults aged 56 years or older in northern Illinois, with up to 19 years of follow-up. Data for this study were gathered until April 2025.

        Main Outcome and Measures  Daytime napping, defined as sleeping between 9 am and 7 pm and assessed by up to 14 days of actigraphy data. Cox proportional hazards regression models were used to estimate associations between baseline daytime nap characteristics (duration, frequency, variability in duration across days, and timing) and subsequent all-cause mortality.

        Results  Among 1338 participants over a mean (SD) follow-up of 8.30 (4.78) years (mean [SD] participant age, 81.40 [7.39] years; 1018 [76.0%] female), 926 (69.2%) died at a mean (SD) of 7.54 (4.52) years (range, 0.08-19.08 years) after analytic baseline. Participants wore the actigraphy device for a mean (SD) of 9.58 (1.22) days. After adjusting for all covariates, longer daytime nap duration (adjusted hazard ratio [AHR] per 1-hour increase, 1.13; 95% CI, 1.04-1.23; P = .005) and higher nap frequency (AHR per additional daily nap, 1.07; 95% CI, 1.02-1.13; P = .003) at baseline were associated with increased mortality. Morning nappers had higher mortality risk compared with early afternoon nappers (AHR, 1.30; 95% CI, 1.03-1.64; P = .03). Variability in daytime nap duration was not associated with mortality after covariate adjustment (AHR per 1-hour increase, 1.01; 95% CI, 0.89-1.14; P = .93).

        Conclusions and Relevance  In this prospective cohort study of community-dwelling older adults, longer and more frequent daytime napping, especially in the morning, were associated with higher all-cause mortality. The findings suggest incorporating wearable device–based daytime nap assessments into clinical and public health practices may provide novel opportunities for early risk identification of health conditions.

        How the immune system may influence Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s, and related diseases

        Maybe this is why saunas are helpful in preventing dementia, boosting the immune system.

        How the immune system may influence Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s, and related diseases

        A sweeping review shows how the brain’s immune defenses can both fight and fuel neurodegeneration, revealing why timing, cell type, and disease context may be crucial for future therapies.

        Innate immune activation and microglial transition during neurodegeneration. (A) During neurodegeneration, distressed neurons release DAMPs such as mtDNA, ROS, HMGB1, aberrant proteins, and pTau–bound RNA. These signals activate resident microglia and astrocytes, which then recruit peripheral immune cells. As shown in more detail in B, activated microglia upregulate PRRs, including TLRs, RAGE, and cGAS, enabling detection of neuron-derived DAMPs. Engagement of PRRs induces proinflammatory gene expression programs and activates inflammasome pathways that promote release of chemokines and cytokines into the CNS parenchyma. As microglia transition from homeostatic to reactive states in a TREM2-dependent manner, damage-associated microglia increase MHC-II expression to support antigen presentation and coordination of adaptive immune responses that attempt to limit neurodegeneration.

        Innate immune activation and microglial transition during neurodegeneration. (A) During neurodegeneration, distressed neurons release DAMPs such as mtDNA, ROS, HMGB1, aberrant proteins, and pTau–bound RNA. These signals activate resident microglia and astrocytes, which then recruit peripheral immune cells. As shown in more detail in B, activated microglia upregulate PRRs, including TLRs, RAGE, and cGAS, enabling detection of neuron-derived DAMPs. Engagement of PRRs induces proinflammatory gene expression programs and activates inflammasome pathways that promote release of chemokines and cytokines into the CNS parenchyma. As microglia transition from homeostatic to reactive states in a TREM2-dependent manner, damage-associated microglia increase MHC-II expression to support antigen presentation and coordination of adaptive immune responses that attempt to limit neurodegeneration.

        A recent review published in the Journal of Clinical Investigation synthesized current evidence on immune mechanisms in neurodegeneration. Accumulating evidence suggests that the immune system not only drives the progression of neurodegenerative diseases but also contributes to their onset through maladaptive cellular signaling and activation. The central nervous system (CNS) parenchyma depends on resident immune cells to maintain the blood-brain barrier (BBB) and respond to dysfunctional cells, pathogens, or cellular damage under steady-state conditions.

        Neurons activate signaling pathways to respond to cellular dysfunction, while microglia and astrocytes alleviate danger signals and recruit peripheral immune cells. However, these responses can aggravate aberrant protein deposition during neurodegeneration, and the balance between detrimental and beneficial immune involvement is poorly defined. In the present review, researchers reviewed current knowledge of immune mechanisms in neurodegeneration.

        Innate Immune Signaling in 

        Neurodegenerative Disease

        Aberrant proteins, including phosphorylated tau, amyloid β (Aβ), and α-synuclein, have been identified as damage-associated molecular patterns (DAMPs) that activate pattern recognition receptors in the CNS. Toll-like receptor 2 (TLR2) and TLR4 are upregulated in mouse models of Alzheimer’s disease (AD) and in the brains of AD patients.

        The binding of Aβ to TLR4 or TLR2 elevates the expression of cytokines, including tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-α, interleukin (IL)-6, IL-1β, IL-17, and IL-10, in microglia and astrocytes. Pharmacological inhibition or genetic ablation of these TLRs worsens cognitive decline and increases Aβ burden in the brain by decreasing microglial activation. The review also highlighted inflammasome and DNA-sensing pathways, including NLRP3 and cGAS-STING, as additional contributors to neuroinflammation across neurodegenerative diseases.

        Studies have consistently reported increased expression of the receptor for advanced glycation end products (RAGE) on neurons, astrocytes, and microglia in AD, Parkinson’s disease (PD), and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. RAGE overexpression in mouse AD models accelerated cognitive impairment, while its deficiency decreased memory deficits.

        Genetic studies in AD patients identified two single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in the triggering receptor expressed on myeloid cells 2 (TREM2), which is highly expressed by microglia, as risk factors of a magnitude comparable to carrying the apolipoprotein E (APOE) ε4 allele. These observations indicate that microglia are key players in neurodegenerative pathogenesis.

        T Cell Responses Across 

        Neurodegenerative Disorders

        A growing body of evidence indicates that cluster of differentiation 4 (CD4+) T cells have disease-specific functions across neurodegenerative diseases. Aβ-restricted CD4+ T cell transfusion into a transgenic AD mouse model was neuroprotective, preventing cognitive decline. In contrast, α-synuclein-specific CD4+ T cells were neurotoxic in PD models, promoting inflammation.

        α-synuclein overexpression increased recruitment of CD4+ T cells producing interferon-γ, while depleting these cells decreased neuronal loss. These observations indicate that CD4+ T cells can be protective in some neurodegenerative diseases and pathogenic in others. In addition, CD8+ T cells have garnered increasing attention as contributors to CNS pathology. CD3+ and CD8+ T cells have been detected in the hippocampus in AD, with CD3+ T cell numbers correlating with tau pathology.

        Similarly, increased CD8+ T cell numbers were observed in PD and correlated with neuronal death, although whether this relationship is causative or reactive remains uncertain. Further, the accumulation of neuroprotective CD8+ T cells in the brains of AD mice has been reported and shown to restrict amyloid plaque growth. Overall, studies reveal that CD8+ T cells have diverse roles in neurodegenerative diseases, shaped by antigen specificity, microglial interactions, and tissue residency. The review also noted growing interest in granzyme K-expressing CD8+ T cells as potentially specialized players in several neurodegenerative conditions.

        Aging, Injury, and Viral Effects 

        on CNS Immunity

        Aging is a major risk factor for neurodegenerative diseases. In youth, microglia survey the CNS, astrocytes maintain the BBB, and only a small number of T cells enter the parenchyma. However, in advanced ages, chronic low-grade inflammation occurs, during which many immune pathways become dysregulated.

        Further, repetitive head injury can accelerate neurodegeneration. Traumatic brain injury is linked to the development of PDAD, and chronic traumatic encephalopathy, even when it occurs in childhood. Following mild traumatic brain injury, the release of DAMPs by distressed cells triggers microglial activation, which clears debris and reinforces weakened BBB regions.

        Repetitive injuries may increase reactivity and trigger microglial death, thereby allowing the entry of myelomonocytic cells. Like repetitive injuries, viral infections can alter CNS immunity and influence vulnerability to neurodegeneration. Recent studies have linked non-neurotropic and neurotropic viral infections to a higher risk of neurodegenerative diseases.

        Immune Timing and 

        Neurodegeneration Implications

        Taken together, neurodegenerative diseases stem from a complex interplay of environmental and biological factors that govern the magnitude and timing of immune activation and the programming of T cells, microglia, and other leukocytes. Viral infection, repetitive head injury, and aging restructure the CNS immune environment. Many immune pathways involved exhibit stage-dependent and context-specific functions.

        Microglial activation may initially help clear aberrant proteins, but could become maladaptive with protracted stimulation. Similarly, CD8+ T cells can promote neuronal injury or support tissue repair based on antigen specificity, local signaling cues, and effector programming. As such, appreciating the cell-intrinsic states and temporal dynamics of immune cells is crucial for understanding immune signatures and determining when immunomodulatory interventions will be beneficial.

        Journal reference:
        • Latour YL, McGavern DB (2026). Immune signaling and function in neurodegeneration. Journal of Clinical Investigation, 136(8), e199850. DOI: 10.1172/JCI199850, https://www.jci.org/articles/view/199850