Lithium management around delivery: a retrospective observational cohort study
M. L. Imaz Gurruchaga, M. Torra Santamaria, K. Langohr, R. Martin-Santos

TL;DR
This study examines lithium use around delivery and finds that maintaining minimal effective levels and briefly discontinuing lithium at delivery can maximize maternal and neonatal well-being.
Contribution
The study provides empirical evidence on lithium pharmacokinetics and neonatal outcomes around delivery, supporting clinical dosing recommendations.
Findings
Maternal and umbilical cord lithium concentrations were strongly correlated.
Discontinuing lithium before delivery led to significantly lower maternal serum concentrations.
Hypotonia was the only acute neonatal complication associated with umbilical cord lithium levels.
Abstract
During the perinatal period lithium is proven effective as maintenance therapy and to prevent postpartum psychosis. Pregnancy affects all aspects of kidney physiology altering the pharmacokinetics of lithium. To minimize the risk of both maternal and neonatal complications around delivery, several authors have provided clinical advice on lithium dosing around delivery: decreasing dose by 30-50%, suspend lithium therapy 24-48 hours before scheduled cesarean section or induced delivery or even discontinuing lithium after first signs of labour. To evaluate the validity of these recommendations by investigating 1) maternal lithium serum concentrations changes around delivery, 2) the lithium trasplacental passage at delivery and 3) the association between neonatal lithium serum concentration at delivery and neonatal outcomes. Psychopathologically stable women with a singleton pregnancy…
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Taxonomy
TopicsBipolar Disorder and Treatment
