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| Methyl salicylate / Sweet Birch oil — Methyl salicylate is a small lipophilic salicylate ester and the dominant constituent of sweet birch oil and wintergreen oil. It is best classified as a natural-product-derived topical counterirritant / salicylate prodrug rather than a practical systemic anticancer agent. Natural sources include Betula lenta sweet birch and Gaultheria procumbens wintergreen, but commercial methyl salicylate is also commonly synthetic. Its cancer relevance is mainly mechanistic and indirect through salicylate biology, with major translation limits from toxicity, dermal absorption variability, and the high millimolar concentrations used in many cell studies. Primary mechanisms (ranked):
Bioavailability / PK relevance: Methyl salicylate is lipophilic and can penetrate skin; dermal absorption and systemic salicylate exposure are strongly formulation-, area-, dose-, heat-, and occlusion-dependent. It is rapidly hydrolyzed to salicylate, so systemic effects and toxicity resemble salicylate exposure. Oral or concentrated essential-oil exposure is a major toxicity concern and should not be treated as a supplement-like route. In-vitro vs systemic exposure relevance: Many anticancer mechanistic studies use sodium salicylate or salicylate at millimolar concentrations, which generally exceed realistic or safe exposure targets for methyl salicylate oil. Topical use can create local tissue exposure and systemic salicylate exposure, but this is not a controlled anticancer delivery strategy. Mechanistically relevant but clinically constrained. Clinical evidence status: Cancer evidence is preclinical / indirect, mostly extrapolated from salicylate and aspirin biology rather than methyl salicylate as an anticancer intervention. Human evidence supports topical analgesic / counterirritant use, not cancer treatment. Regulatory deployment is OTC topical analgesic/counterirritant in some jurisdictions and cosmetic/fragrance ingredient under concentration limits, with important salicylate toxicity, skin burn/irritation, sensitization, renal disease, anticoagulant, and pediatric safety constraints. Methyl Salicylate Mechanistic Ranking
TSF legend: P: 0–30 min R: 30 min–3 hr G: >3 hr |
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| For many drugs, the half-life is the time it takes for half of the drug’s active substance to be eliminated from the bloodstream. In medicine, knowing a drug’s half-life helps in designing treatment regimens that reduce adverse effects. |
| 6537- | MeSal, | The ancient drug salicylate directly activates AMP-activated protein kinase |
| - | Review, | Nor, | NA |
Query results interpretion may depend on "conditions" listed in the research papers. Such Conditions may include : -low or high Dose -format for product, such as nano of lipid formations -different cell line effects -synergies with other products -if effect was for normal or cancerous cells
Filter Conditions: Pro/AntiFlg:% IllCat:% CanType:% Cells:% prod#:412 Target#:1109 State#:% Dir#:4
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