Friday, October 30, 2015

Penetrating the Blood-Brain Barrier: New Frontier in Drug Delivery Strategies

Brain "Window" To Permit Pharmaceutical Access via Nasal Spray


Drug Delivery across Blood-Brain Barrier
Drugs used to treat a variety of central nervous system diseases may be administered through the nose and diffused through an implanted mucosal graft (A, in red) to gain access to the brain. Under normal circumstances, there are multiple layers within the nose that block the access of pharmaceutical agents from getting to the brain including bone and the dura/arachnoid membrane, which represents part of the blood-brain barrier (B). After endoscopic skull base surgery (C), all of these layers are removed and replaced with a nasal mucosal graft, which is 1,000 times more porous than the native blood-brain barrier. Consequently, these grafts may be used to deliver very large drugs, including proteins, which would otherwise be blocked by the blood-brain barrier. 
Credit: Garyfallia Pagonis and Benjamin S. Bleier, M.D.

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