An 1898 study observed that low-concentration "
bile salts" failed to affect behavior when injected into the blood of animals. Thus, in theory, the salts failed to enter the brain. Two years later,
Max Lewandowsky may have been the first to coin the term "blood–brain barrier" in 1900, referring to the hypothesized semipermeable membrane. There is some debate over the creation of the term
blood–brain barrier as it is often attributed to Lewandowsky, but it does not appear in his papers. The creator of the term may have been
Lina Stern. Stern was a Russian scientist who published her work in Russian and French. Due to the language barrier between her publications and English-speaking scientists, this could have made her work a lesser-known origin of the term. All the while,
bacteriologist Paul Ehrlich was studying
staining, a procedure that is used in many
microscopy studies to make fine biological structures visible using chemical dyes. As Ehrlich injected some of these dyes (notably the
aniline dyes that were then widely used), the dye stained all of the
organs of some kinds of animals except for their brains. At that time, Ehrlich attributed this lack of staining to the brain simply not picking up as much of the dye. However, in a later experiment in 1913,
Edwin Goldmann (one of Ehrlich's students) injected the dye directly into the
cerebrospinal fluid of animal brains. He found then the brains did become dyed, but the rest of the body did not, demonstrating the existence of a compartmentalization between the two. At that time, it was thought that the blood vessels themselves were responsible for the barrier, since no obvious membrane could be found. ==See also==