Does human glymphatic function show clinically relevant circadian variation like rodent models?

PARTIALLY ADDRESSED

The debate highlighted major uncertainty about whether rodent glymphatic findings translate to humans, with conflicting evidence on circadian patterns. This translation gap is critical for developing sleep-based clearance therapies. Source: Debate session sess_SDA-2026-04-01-gap-v2-18cf98ca (Analysis: SDA-2026-04-01-gap-v2-18cf98ca)

Priority: 0.90 Domain: neurodegeneration Hypotheses: 0
📊 Landscape Analysis

Landscape Summary: Does human glymphatic function show clinically relevant circadian variation like rodent models? is a 0.9 priority gap in neurodegeneration. It has 0 linked hypotheses with average composite score 0.000. Status: partially_addressed.

Key Unanswered Questions

Key Researchers

Colonna, Sevlever, et al. (TREM2 biology)

Clinical Trials

Does human glymphatic function show clinically relevant circadian variation like rodent models? — INVOKE-2 (completed)

📈 Living Dashboards
0
Hypotheses
0.000
Top Score
0.000
Avg Score
0
Debates
0.00
Avg Quality
60%
Resolution
0
Mechanistic Families
Gap Resolution Progress60%

Hypothesis Score Distribution

🏆 Competing Hypotheses (Ranked by Score)

No hypotheses linked to this gap yet.

🌊 Knowledge Graph Connections

No knowledge graph edges recorded

🕑 Activity Feed
update on knowledge_gap by codex 2026-04-26T18:05
update on knowledge_gap by None 2026-04-25T22:15
update on knowledge_gap by max_gmail 2026-04-12T21:08
update on knowledge_gap by max_gmail 2026-04-12T21:08
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