Abstract

The temporal aspects of the pharmacokinetics and toxicity of lithium were studied in mice eating normal and low-sodium diets. ICR male mice, housed under a light:dark (LD; 12:12) cycle, were injected with variable doses of lithium chloride i.p. A circadian rhythm was found in lithium clearance after a single administration in mice eating the normal diet showed the maximum value in the early dark phase and the minimum in the early light phase. The repeated administration of lithium did not affect the rhythm of the pharmacokinetics of the drug under the LD cycle. Although the low-sodium diet significantly decreased the lithium clearance, it did not influence the rhythm of the clearance. Higher toxicity was demonstrated in mice injected with the drug at the time of day with lower lithium clearance in the single-dose study but not in the repeated-doses study, regardless of the diet conditions. The low-sodium diet increased the acute and chronic toxicity of lithium. The results indicate that there is a circadian rhythm of acute toxicity and clearance of lithium after a single dose or repeated administration of the drug in mice eating normal and low-sodium diets and that the low-sodium diet increases lithium toxicity by reducing the clearance of the drug without influencing the rhythm characteristics.

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