Blood Brain Barrier

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There are 3 brain barrier systems:

  1. Blood-peripheral nerves and ganglia barrier system
  2. Blood-cerebrospinal fluid barrier
  3. Blood-brain barrier (BBB)

Barriers are functionally immature in the human neonates - potential danger of bypassing by various toxic and pharmacological agents (bilirubin, PNC).

Contents

edit edit Locations without covering

Some small CNS regions are out of the BBB:

  1. Area postrema of the fourth ventricle
  2. Subfornical organ
  3. Epiphysis
  4. Neurohypophysis
  5. Median eminence

All the above structures have some common characteristics:

  1. They are located on the midline ventricular surface
  2. Majority of their capillaries are fenestrated
  3. They are employed in neurosecretory function
  4. They contain receptors for various blood-borne molecules (e.g., peptide hormones) - the ability to have full access to the blood content enables them to sense osmolarity, glucose concentration, etc, correctly

edit edit Permeability

The low permeability is due to tight junctions (zonae occludens). For substances that need to access areas that are covered by the BBB, such as leptin, there are specific carrier proteins that enable transport of such hormones (bidirectionally), from the blood into the hypothalamus for example.

The layers of the BBB consist of:

  1. the capillary endothelium, connected via tight junctions (zonulae occludens)
  2. a continuous homogeneous basement membrane
  3. the processes of numerous astroglia

The BBB is:

It is obvious that the blood-cerebrospinal fluid and blood-brain barriers limit the degree of how much drug can enter the cerebrospinal fluid or parenchyma of the brain. Such drugs may be protein antibodies and other non-lipid-soluble drugs.

edit edit Transport of nutrients

edit edit Functions of the BBB

  1. Protection of the nervous system from pathogens
  2. Precise local environment regulation
  3. Retaining of certain factors within the brain (neurotransmitters, neuromodulators)


edit edit Links

edit edit Related articles

edit edit Sources

edit edit Bibliography

edit edit Further reading

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