{{Short description|Disproportionate drug concentrations in differing tissues}} '''Tissue selectivity''' is a topic in distribution (pharmacology) and property of some drugs. It refers to when a drug occurs in disproportionate concentrations and/or has disproportionate effects in specific tissues relative to other tissues.<ref name="Zweten1997">{{cite book|last=Zweten|title=Antihypertensive Drugs|date=5 September 1997|publisher=CRC Press|language=en|isbn=9789057021220|page=345|quote=The term “tissue selectivity” is used for an agent showing varying degrees of potency between tissues, with a preferential action in a given one.}}</ref> An example of such drugs are selective estrogen receptor modulators (SERM) like tamoxifen, which show estrogenic effects in some tissues and antiestrogenic effects in other tissues. Another example is peripherally-selective drugs, which do not cross the blood-brain-barrier into the central nervous system and hence are tissue-selective for the periphery.

==References== {{Reflist}} {{Pharmacology}}

Category:Pharmacology

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