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blood-brain barrier; blood-CSF barrier; plasma-CSF barrier

Structure: - continuous layer of endothelial cells connected by tight junctions - similar capillaries are found in the retina, iris, inner ear & endoneurium of peripheral nerves - in circumventricular organs, the blood brain barrier is absent; the endothelium is fenestrated - the blood-CSF barrier is provided by tight junctions between ependymal cells Function: - the choroid plexus regulates nutrient, lipid & protein transport across the blood-CSF barrier - opposes passage of most ions & large molecular weight compounds from the blood into the cerebrospinal fluid & brain tissue - insulin can cross the blood brain barrier* & can penetrate the hippocampus [4] * insulin can be delivered through the nose to the brain, via a simple nasal spray [4] Pathology: - breakdown of the blood brain barrier occurs in many neurodegenerative disorders [3] - Alzheimer disease - Parkinson disease - Huntington disease - amyotrophic lateral sclerosis - multiple sclerosis - HIV-1-associated dementia - chronic traumatic encephalopathy Comparative biology: - p16INK4a expressing (dubbed senescent) endothelial cells associated with compromised blood brain barrier in mice [2]

Related

circumventricular organ

General

vascular endothelium

References

  1. Stedman's Medical Dictionary 27th ed, Williams & Wilkins, Baltimore, 1999
  2. Yamazaki Y, Baker DJ, Tachibana M et al Vascular Cell Senescence Contributes to Blood-Brain Barrier Breakdown. Stroke. 2016 Feb 16. PMID: 26883501
  3. Sweeney MD, Sagare AP, Zlokovic BV Blood-brain barrier breakdown in Alzheimer disease and other neurodegenerative disorders. Nature Reviews Neurology. Jan 29, 2018 PMID: 29377008 https://www.nature.com/articles/nrneurol.2017.188
  4. Szalinski C A New Way to 'Smuggle' Drugs Through the Blood-Brain Barrier. Medscape. Oct 10, 2024 https://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/new-way-smuggle-drugs-through-blood-brain-barrier-2024a1000ijs

Component-of

brain