The British Journal of Psychiatry 158: 53-58 (1991)
© 1991 The Royal College of Psychiatrists
Lithium: long-term effects on the kidney. A prospective follow-up study ten years after kidney biopsy
O Hetmar, UJ Povlsen, J Ladefoged and TG Bolwig
Department of Psychiatry, Rigshospitalet, University of Copenhagen, Denmark.
Forty-six patients with recurrent affective disorders, who began
prophylactic treatment with lithium an average of 20 years previously, were
followed up prospectively after a ten-year observation period to assess
renal function. Nineteen patients had maintained lithium therapy, and eight
patients had died. Tubular function was almost unchanged and patients who
had continued lithium had not shown increasing urine volumes, but patients
who had received lithium in a single daily dosage at night had a
significantly lower urinary output than those on a multiple-dosage
schedule. The GFR decreased significantly, but the decline was essentially
dependent on increasing age, except in two patients who had developed renal
insufficiency. Renal function during chronic lithium treatment is related
to age, lithium intoxication episodes, pre-existing renal disease, and
treatment schedule rather than to duration of prophylactic lithium therapy.