학술논문

Brain banking in low and middle-income countries: Raison D'être for the Ibadan Brain Ageing, Dementia And Neurodegeneration (IBADAN) Brain Bank Project.
Document Type
Article
Source
Brain Research Bulletin. Feb2019, Vol. 145, p136-141. 6p.
Subject
*BODY fluids
*CEREBROSPINAL fluid
*MIDDLE-income countries
*BLOOD banks
*DEMENTIA
Language
ISSN
0361-9230
Abstract
Highlights • Brain banks have become important global resources in the last three decades. • The IBADAN Brain Bank is the first organized brain tissue biorepository in sub - Saharan Africa. • It is set up to accrue, process and store unique brain tissue for research into a broad spectrum of brain disorders. • The potential unique discoveries and research breakthroughs will benefit African and other ancestral populations. Abstract Brain banks are biorepositories of central nervous system (CNS) tissue including fixed and frozen whole brains, brain biopsies and spinal cord, as well as body fluids comprising the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) and blood stored for research purposes. Though several independent brain banks exist in high income countries, only five low- and middle - income countries (LMIC) have brain banks. The African continent is yet to establish a formalized brain bank despite its huge human genomic diversity, ageing of her populations with concomitant increases in ageing – associated brain disorders and differential phenotypic expression and outcomes of brain disorders. Cellular and molecular clinicopathological studies are vital to shaping our understanding of the interaction between racial (genetic) and geographical (environmental) factors in the natural history and mechanisms of disease, and unravelling frameworks of diagnostic biomarkers, and new therapeutic and preventative interventions. The Ibadan Brain Ageing, Dementia And Neurodegeneration (IBADAN) Brain Bank, the first organized brain tissue biorepository in sub - Saharan Africa, is set up to accrue, process and store unique brain tissues for future research into a broad spectrum of neurological and psychiatric disorders. The potential unique discoveries and research breakthroughs will benefit people of African ancestry and other ancestral populations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]