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Old 06-10-2008, 05:24 AM   #1
Lani
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Mar 2006
Posts: 4,778
tamoxifen crosses blood brain barrier and may help reverse damage from strokes!!!

(it seems to do so in rats at least-- sounds hopeful!)

: Recent Patents CNS Drug Discov. 2008 Jun;3(2):104-8.

Tamoxifen as a powerful neuroprotectant in experimental stroke and implications for human stroke therapy.

Kimelberg HK.
Neural and Vascular Biology, Ordway Research Institute,150 New Scotland Ave., Albany, NY 12208, USA. hkimelberg@ordwayresearch.org.
Several recent studies from the author's laboratory have shown that tamoxifen, at higher concentrations than used for breast cancer and given i.v., can substantially prevent tissue infarct and behavioral deficits in reversible and permanent rat focal stroke models for up to at least 14 days after initiation of ischemia. Longer times and purely i.p. or oral administration have not yet been tried. Its marked effectiveness may be because it has several neuroprotective modes of action including free radical scavenging and, being highly lipid soluble, readily crosses the blood-brain barrier. Plus, it has a three hour therapeutic window. Thus it meets many of the STAIR criteria and should be a promising candidate for clinical use. However, a number of its positive effects were exhibited by the free radical trapping agent NXY-058, which also functions as a free radical scavenger. In two recently completed clinical trials (SAINT 1 and 2) NXY-058 had marginal positive effects and did not meet treatment criteria, respectively. Differences that may make tamoxifen still desirable and the problem of predicting clinical efficacy from successful animal studies are discussed.
PMID: 18537769 [PubMed - in process
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