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Home - Medicine - Inflammation’s Fingerprint on the Brain’s Wiring

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Inflammation’s Fingerprint on the Brain’s Wiring

Last updated: January 23, 2026 5:04 am
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The latest discoveries in Neurology

A concise briefing on the most relevant research developments in your field, curated for clarity and impact.

Inflammation’s Fingerprint on the Brain’s Wiring

A new study uses Mendelian randomization to establish causal links between specific inflammatory cytokines and the microstructure of the brain’s white matter. By analyzing genetic data and advanced neurite orientation dispersion and density imaging (NODDI) from the UK Biobank, researchers identified pronounced correlations. These findings suggest that dysregulation of inflammatory factors can causally alter the diffusion properties of key white matter tracts, including the corpus callosum and superior longitudinal fasciculus, offering genetic evidence for inflammation’s role in brain structure.

Why it might matter to you:
This research provides a mechanistic bridge between systemic inflammation and the structural brain changes often observed in neurodevelopmental and psychiatric conditions. For a researcher in neurodevelopmental disorders, it highlights a potential upstream, modifiable factor—inflammatory dysregulation—that could influence white matter development and connectivity. This suggests new avenues for investigating preventative or therapeutic strategies that target immune pathways to support healthy neural circuitry.


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