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Lithium and nephrotoxicity: unravelling the complex pathophysiological threads of the lightest metal
journal contribution
posted on 2018-10-01, 00:00 authored by J Davis, M Desmond, Michael BerkMichael BerkWhile lithium remains the most efficacious treatment for bipolar disorder, it can cause significant nephrotoxicity. The molecular mechanisms behind both this process and the development of nephrogenic diabetes insipidus still remain to be fully elucidated but appear to involve alterations in glycogen synthase kinase 3 signalling, G2 cell cycle progression arrest, alterations in inositol and prostaglandin signalling pathways, and dysregulated trafficking and transcription of aquaporin 2 water channels. The end result of this is a tubulointerstitial nephropathy with microcyst formation and relative glomerular sparing, both visible on pathology specimens and increasingly noted on non-invasive imaging. This paper will elucidate on the current evidence pertaining to the pathophysiology of lithium induced nephrotoxicity.
History
Journal
NephrologyVolume
23Issue
10Pagination
897 - 903Publisher
John Wiley & SonsLocation
Chichester, Eng.Publisher DOI
Link to full text
eISSN
1440-1797Language
engPublication classification
C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journalCopyright notice
2018, Asian Pacific Society of NephrologyUsage metrics
Categories
Keywords
chronic kidney diseasefibrosislithiumnephrotoxicitypathophysiologyScience & TechnologyLife Sciences & BiomedicineUrology & NephrologyNEPHROGENIC DIABETES-INSIPIDUSACUTE KIDNEY INJURYMEDULLARY COLLECTING DUCTPOPULATION-BASED COHORTSOLID RENAL TUMORSRAT-KIDNEYINDUCED NDIISCHEMIA\/REPERFUSION INJURYALTERED EXPRESSIONBIPOLAR DISORDER