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Chinese Journal of Cerebrovascular Diseases(Electronic Edition) ›› 2026, Vol. 20 ›› Issue (01): 9-15. doi: 10.3877/cma.j.issn.1673-9248.2026.01.002

• Expert Forum • Previous Articles    

Research advances on cranial bone marrow in the central nervous system

Wenqian Liu1, Yilong Wang2,3,4,5,6,7,8,()   

  1. 1 School of Medicine, Hunan University of Chinese Medicine, Changsha 410208, China
    2 Department of Neurology, Beijing Tiantan Hospital, Capital Medical University, Beijing 100070, China
    3 Chinese Institute for Brain Research, Beijing 102206, China
    4 National Center for Neurological Disorders, Beijing 100070, China
    5 Advanced Innovation Center for Human Brain Protection, Capital Medical University, Beijing 100069, China
    6 China National Clinical Research Center for Neurological Diseases, Beijing 100070, China
    7 Beijing Laboratory of Oral Health, Beijing 100083, China
    8 Laboratory for Capital Medical University and Beijing Tiantan Hospital, Beijing 100070, China
  • Received:2025-11-28 Online:2026-02-01 Published:2026-03-11
  • Contact: Yilong Wang

Abstract:

Cranial bone marrow (CBM) is a research hotspot at the intersection of neuroscience and immunology. Endowed with unique structural features (e.g., lifelong plastic blood vessels, skull-dural microchannels, and periosteum-specific lymphatic vessels) and molecular phenotypes (anti-aging hematopoietic microenvironment, immune cells with anti-inflammatory phenotypes), CBM serves as a critical hematopoietic and immune reservoir adjacent to the central nervous system (CNS). CBM regulates CNS homeostasis through dual functions of hematopoiesis support and immune surveillance, playing important roles in stroke, meningitis, brain tumors, etc. Its microchannels also act as a potential drug delivery route bypassing the blood-brain barrier. The "CBM-dura mater-glymphatic system" forms the core regulatory axis of CNS homeostasis. In the future, it is necessary to focus on the internal coordination mechanism of the regulatory axis, the regulation of microchannel opening, non-invasive human imaging and tracing technologies of skull and dura mater microchannels, the clinical transformation and application of key regulatory targets and microchannel drug delivery technologies, and 3D microchannel reconstruction after skull defect, so as to provide new breakthroughs for the precise diagnosis and treatment of CNS diseases.

Key words: Cranial bone marrow, Micro-channels, Glymphatic system, Central nervous system, Immunoregulation

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