PMID-sentid Pub_year Sent_text comp_official_name comp_offsetprotein_name organism prot_offset 18616671-7 2008 CONCLUSIONS: In both ethanol intoxication and thiamin-deficient glucose metabolism, BCSFB impairment exposes the CSF and hence the brain extracellular fluid to neuroactive substances from the blood. Thiamine 46-53 colony stimulating factor 2 Rattus norvegicus 85-88 7674851-0 1995 MRI demonstration of impairment of the blood-CSF barrier by glucose administration to the thiamin-deficient rat brain. Thiamine 90-97 colony stimulating factor 2 Rattus norvegicus 45-48 7674851-2 1995 The period of the onset of this blood-CSF or blood-brain barrier dysfunction coincides with our previous observations of accumulation of glutamate or glutamate derivatives following an equivalent glucose load under identical conditions of thiamin deficiency, consistent with a relationship between these two observations. Thiamine 239-246 colony stimulating factor 2 Rattus norvegicus 38-41