lithium

8 interactions related to lithium

alcohol + lithium

Lithium has a narrow therapeutic window and is excreted by the kidneys. Alcohol causes diuresis and dehydration, which reduces renal lithium clearance and raises serum lithium levels — pushing patients toward lithium toxicity (tremor, confusion, ataxia, arrhythmia). Alcohol also worsens mood instability in bipolar disorder.

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alcohollithiumbipolarmood stabilizerlithium toxicitydehydrationnarrow therapeutic windowdrug interaction

taurine + lithium

Taurine has weak diuretic and natriuretic activity in the kidney, which can theoretically alter renal clearance of lithium and shift serum lithium concentrations. Because lithium has a narrow therapeutic window and is cleared almost entirely by the kidneys, any agent affecting renal sodium handling can change steady-state levels and increase the risk of toxicity or therapeutic failure.

moderate
taurinelithiumbipolarrenal clearancediureticnarrow therapeutic indexpsychiatric medicationsupplement interaction

lithium + ibuprofen

Ibuprofen and other NSAIDs inhibit renal prostaglandin synthesis, reducing renal blood flow and lithium clearance. This raises serum lithium by approximately 15 to 60 percent, with multiple published cases of clinically significant lithium toxicity after NSAID introduction.

high
lithiumibuprofennsaidrenal clearancebipolar disorderdrug toxicityprostaglandinspain reliever

lithium + sodium

Lithium and sodium are handled by the same renal transporters and compete for reabsorption in the proximal tubule. A low-sodium diet causes the kidneys to retain sodium and lithium, raising lithium levels and the risk of toxicity; a sudden high-sodium load can drop lithium below the therapeutic range.

high
lithiumsodiumdietbipolar disorderrenal clearanceelectrolytesdehydrationlow-sodium diet

lithium + caffeine

Caffeine increases renal clearance of lithium by promoting natriuresis and increasing glomerular filtration, so chronic caffeine intake lowers lithium blood levels. A sudden reduction in caffeine intake can raise serum lithium into the toxic range, while abruptly increasing caffeine can lower levels and worsen mood symptoms.

moderate
lithiumcaffeinebipolar disorderrenal clearancedrug monitoringpsychiatric medicationcoffeenarrow therapeutic index

lithium + ace inhibitors

ACE inhibitors reduce glomerular filtration rate and decrease sodium delivery to the distal nephron, which lowers renal lithium clearance and can raise serum lithium by approximately 36 percent. Toxicity may emerge with delayed onset 3 to 5 weeks after starting the ACE inhibitor, particularly in older adults and those with reduced renal function.

high
lithiumace inhibitorlisinoprilenalaprilramiprilrenal clearancebipolar disorderhypertensiondrug toxicity

chocolate + lithium

The caffeine in chocolate increases renal lithium clearance through its diuretic effect, lowering serum lithium levels. A sudden change in chocolate or caffeine intake — especially abrupt cessation — can cause serum lithium to rise into the toxic range, while sudden additions can push levels sub-therapeutic.

moderate
chocolatelithiumcaffeinerenal clearancelithium toxicitybipolar disorderdrug interactionpsychiatric medication

energy drinks + lithium

The caffeine in energy drinks increases renal clearance of lithium by raising glomerular filtration rate and sodium excretion, which can lower serum lithium below the therapeutic window and trigger relapse of bipolar symptoms. Conversely, abrupt reduction or cessation of high caffeine intake while on a stable lithium dose can push serum lithium into the toxic range; a published case report documented a 24% rise in serum lithium after caffeine withdrawal.

high
energy drinkslithiumbipolarcaffeinerenal clearancetherapeutic drug monitoringpsychiatric medicationinteraction