Mood stabilizers: Nursing pharmacology
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Notes
| MOOD STABILIZERS | ||
| DRUG NAME | lithium (Lithobid) | |
| CLASS | Mood stabilizer; antimanic agent | |
| MECHANISM OF ACTION |
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| INDICATIONS | Bipolar disorder | |
| ROUTE(S) OF ADMINISTRATION | PO | |
| SIDE EFFECTS |
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| CONTRAINDICATIONS AND CAUTIONS |
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| NURSING CONSIDERATIONS | Assessment and monitoring
Client education
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Transcript
Mood stabilizers are medications used to treat bipolar disorder, which is a mental health condition characterized by dramatic shifts in emotions, mood, and energy levels.
In other words, a person with bipolar disorder can alternate from extreme lows to extreme highs, so mood stabilizer medications can help smooth out these mood swings.
Now, the first-line mood stabilizer is lithium, but other medications can also be used, including antiepileptics, such as carbamazepine, valproic acid, and lamotrigine; and antipsychotics, like olanzapine.
Now, lithium is taken orally, and it’s rapidly absorbed by the gastrointestinal tract. Once absorbed, it travels to the brain and regulates the release of neurotransmitters through an unclear mechanism.
In particular, lithium seems to inhibit the release of norepinephrine and dopamine, while it increases the production of serotonin and alters the sodium-potassium ion transport in neurons, as well as in muscle cells.
It’s important to note that lithium has boxed warning for toxicity because it has a narrow therapeutic index, meaning that small variations in its blood concentrations can result in serious side effects and toxicity.
The most common causes of lithium toxicity include increased lithium dosage; decreased renal elimination, which is especially common in clients with kidney problems or hyponatremia; and the use of medications that can affect renal clearance, such as NSAIDs, ACE inhibitors, and diuretics.
Now the most important side effects of lithium toxicity include thirst, lethargy, slurred speech, and muscle weakness, as well as gastrointestinal side effects, such as nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea.
In addition, individuals may develop seizures, hyperreflexia or overactive reflexes, and ataxia, which refers to a lack of coordination and muscle control.
Another important side effect of lithium therapy is nephrogenic diabetes insipidus, which is characterized by polyuria or the production of large quantities of very dilute urine, as well as polydipsia or extreme thirst. Fortunately, this can be reversed by discontinuing lithium.
Finally, a potentially life-threatening effect of lithium therapy, especially when combined with certain antidepressant medications, is serotonin syndrome, which is caused by high levels of serotonin in the brain.
This typically presents with skin flushing, hyperthermia, agitation, muscle rigidity, seizures, and altered mental status or even coma.
Finally, lithium is contraindicated during pregnancy and breastfeeding, as well as in children under the age of 12. Also, this medication should not be used in clients with severe cardiac and renal impairment, since these conditions can cause variations in its blood concentrations and result in lithium toxicity.
Other important contraindications include hepatic impairment, schizophrenia, and brain trauma, as well as organic brain syndrome, which refers to all diseases of the brain that are manifested by psychiatric signs and symptoms.
Sources
- "Pharmacology: A Patient-Centered Nursing Process Approach, 9th edition" Elsevier Canada (2020)
- "Mosby’s 2023 Nursing Drug Reference, 36th edition" Mosby (2022)
- "Saunders Comprehensive Review for the NCLEX-RN, 9th Edition" Saunders (2022)
- "Davis Advantage for Townsend’s Essentials of Psychiatric Mental-Health Nursing Concepts of Care in Evidence-Based Practice, Ninth edition" F.A. Davis Company (2022)
- "Mood Stabilizers in Psychiatric Disorders and Mechanisms Learnt from In Vitro Model Systems" Int J Mol Sci (2021)
- "A taxonomy of clinical response to mood stabilizers" Bipolar Disord (2021)