| Literature DB >> 32095461 |
Abstract
Among the various routes of drug administration, perhaps the least studied is intracerebroventricular (ICV) administration. This route has been shown to be particularly useful in administering to the central nervous system (CNS) drugs that do not cross the blood-brain barrier readily. As such, the ICV route is a valuable option for providing therapeutic CNS drug concentrations to treat patients with CNS infectious and neoplastic diseases. This route of drug administration also has the advantage of minimizing systemic toxicity.Entities:
Keywords: CNS cancer; Cerebrospinal fluid physiology; Intracerebroventricular drug administration; Meningitis; Pharmacokinetics
Year: 2017 PMID: 32095461 PMCID: PMC7033376 DOI: 10.12793/tcp.2017.25.3.117
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Transl Clin Pharmacol ISSN: 2289-0882
Figure 1The Ommaya reservoir consists of a mushroom-shaped dome made of specially thickened silicone rubber that can accommodate multiple needle punctures. It is connected to a silicone rubber catheter that is inserted via a burr hole into a lateral cerebral ventricle. The dome is mounted subcutaneously and is a compressible pump. This pump facilitates extensive mixing of injected drugs within the CSF space and also permits withdrawing well-mixed ventricular CSF samples (This figure was released to the public domain by its author, Patrick L. Lynch. You may find the image at https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Ommaya_01.png#file).