Syndrome of Irreversible Lithium-Effectuated Neurotoxicity: Silent, but not innocent
M. S. Bicho, J. M. Coelho, B. Peixoto, C. Cruz, P. Baião, I. Ferreira

TL;DR
This paper discusses a rare but serious neurological condition caused by long-term lithium use, highlighting its symptoms and risk factors.
Contribution
The paper introduces and reviews the Syndrome of Irreversible Lithium-Effectuated Neurotoxicity (SILENT) as a distinct clinical entity.
Findings
SILENT Syndrome is characterized by persistent neurological issues like cerebellar disorder and dementia.
The condition is more prevalent in females aged 21 to 77 and can result in coordination and balance problems.
Lithium-induced neurotoxicity can occur even at therapeutic levels and may involve demyelination in the cerebellum.
Abstract
Lithium is one of the main drugs used in Bipolar Affective Disorder. However, it has a narrow therapeutic window, which requires close monitoring and progressive dose adjustment, according to serum levels, clinical response and the appearance of side effects. The term ‘SILENT’ explains descriptively persistent neurological sequelae related to lithium salt intoxication when symptoms persist for more than 2 months after stopping treatment. SILENT Syndrome is more common in females, at ages ranging from 21 to 77 years and is characterized mainly by avermian-type cerebellar disorder, persistent extrapyramidal syndrome, brainstem dysfunction and dementia of varying severity. It can also result in apraxia of the body, changes in the coordination and balance, dysarthria, as well as intentional and kinetic cerebellar tremor, involuntary movements of orofacial dyskinesias or resting tremor. The…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPharmacological Effects and Toxicity Studies · Bipolar Disorder and Treatment · Parkinson's Disease and Spinal Disorders
