Abstract
The blood-brain barrier (BBB) plays central roles in the maintenance and health of the brain. Its mechanisms to safeguard the brain against xenobiotics and endogenous toxins also make the BBB the primary obstacle to the development of drugs for the central nervous system (CNS). Here, we review classic examples of the intersection of clinical medicine, drug delivery, and the BBB. We highlight the role of lipid solubility (heroin), saturable brain-to-blood (efflux: opiates) and blood-to-brain (influx: nutrients, vitamins, and minerals) transport systems, and adsorptive transcytosis (viruses and incretin receptor agonists). We examine how the disruption of the BBB that occurs in certain diseases (tumors) can also be modulated (osmotic agents and microbubbles) and used to deliver treatments, and the role of extracellular pathways in gaining access to the CNS (albumin and antibodies). In summary, this review provides a historical perspective of the key role of the BBB in delivery of drugs to the brain in health and disease.
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