Eskalith
Generic Name: lithium carbonate
Dosage Form: Capsules, controlled-release tablets
Warning
Lithium toxicity is closely related to serum lithium levels,
and can occur at doses close to therapeutic levels. Facilities for prompt
and accurate serum lithium determinations should be available before initiating
therapy (see DOSAGE AND ADMINISTRATION).
Eskalith Description
Eskalith contains lithium carbonate, a white, light alkaline
powder with molecular formula Li2CO3 and molecular weight 73.89. Lithium is
an element of the alkali-metal group with atomic number 3, atomic weight 6.94
and an emission line at 671 nm on the flame photometer.
Eskalith Capsules
Each capsule, with opaque gray cap and opaque yellow body,
is imprinted with the product name Eskalith and SB and contains lithium carbonate,
300 mg. Inactive ingredients consist of benzyl alcohol, cetylpyridinium
chloride, D&C Yellow No. 10, FD&C Green No. 3, FD&C
Red No. 40, FD&C Yellow No. 6, gelatin, lactose, magnesium stearate,
povidone, sodium lauryl sulfate, titanium dioxide, and trace amounts of other
inactive ingredients.
Eskalith CR Controlled-Release Tablets
Each round, yellow, biconvex tablet, debossed with SKF and
J10 on one side and scored on the other side, contains lithium carbonate,
450 mg. Inactive ingredients consist of alginic acid, gelatin, iron oxide,
magnesium stearate, and sodium starch glycolate.
Eskalith CR
Tablets 450 mg are designed to release a portion of the dose initially
and the remainder gradually; the release pattern of the controlled release
tablets reduces the variability in lithium blood levels seen with the immediate
release dosage forms.
ACTIONS
Preclinical studies have shown that lithium alters sodium
transport in nerve and muscle cells and effects a shift toward intraneuronal
metabolism of catecholamines, but the specific biochemical mechanism of lithium
action in mania is unknown.
INDICATIONS
Eskalith (lithium carbonate) is indicated in the treatment
of manic episodes of manic-depressive illness. Maintenance therapy prevents
or diminishes the intensity of subsequent episodes in those manic-depressive
patients with a history of mania.
Typical symptoms
of mania include pressure of speech, motor hyperactivity, reduced need for
sleep, flight of ideas, grandiosity, elation, poor judgment, aggressiveness
and possibly hostility. When given to a patient experiencing a manic episode,
Eskalith may produce a normalization of symptomatology within 1 to 3 weeks.
Warnings
Lithium should generally not be given to patients with significant
renal or cardiovascular disease, severe debilitation or dehydration, or sodium
depletion, since the risk of lithium toxicity is very high in such patients.
If the psychiatric indication is life-threatening, and if such a patient fails
to respond to other measures, lithium treatment may be undertaken with extreme
caution, including daily serum lithium determinations and adjustment to the
usually low doses ordinarily tolerated by these individuals. In such instances,
hospitalization is a necessity.
Chronic lithium therapy
may be associated with diminution of renal concentrating ability, occasionally
presenting as nephrogenic diabetes insipidus, with polyuria and polydipsia.
Such patients should be carefully managed to avoid dehydration with resulting
lithium retention and toxicity. This condition is usually reversible when
lithium is discontinued.
Morphologic changes with glomerular
and interstitial fibrosis and nephron atrophy have been reported in patients
on chronic lithium therapy. Morphologic changes have also been seen in manic-depressive
patients never exposed to lithium. The relationship between renal functional
and morphologic changes and their association with lithium therapy have not
been established.
When kidney function is assessed,
for baseline data prior to starting lithium therapy or thereafter, routine
urinalysis and other tests may be used to evaluate tubular function (e.g.,
urine specific gravity or osmolality following a period of water deprivation,
or 24-hour urine volume) and glomerular function (e.g., serum creatinine or
creatinine clearance). During lithium therapy, progressive or sudden changes
in renal function, even within the normal range, indicate the need for reevaluation
of treatment.
An encephalopathic syndrome (characterized
by weakness, lethargy, fever, tremulousness and confusion, extrapyramidal
symptoms, leukocytosis, elevated serum enzymes, BUN and FBS) has occurred
in a few patients treated with lithium plus a neuroleptic. In some instances,
the syndrome was followed by irreversible brain damage. Because of a possible
causal relationship between these events and the concomitant administration
of lithium and neuroleptics, patients receiving such combined therapy should
be monitored closely for early evidence of neurologic toxicity and treatment
discontinued promptly if such signs appear. This encephalopathic syndrome
may be similar to or the same as neuroleptic malignant syndrome (NMS).
Lithium
toxicity is closely related to serum lithium levels, and can occur at doses
close to therapeutic levels (see DOSAGE AND ADMINISTRATION).
Outpatients
and their families should be warned that the patient must discontinue lithium
carbonate therapy and contact his physician if such clinical signs of lithium
toxicity as diarrhea, vomiting, tremor, mild ataxia, drowsiness, or muscular
weakness occur.
Lithium carbonate may impair mental
and/or physical abilities. Caution patients about activities requiring alertness
(e.g., operating vehicles or machinery).
Lithium may
prolong the effects of neuromuscular blocking agents. Therefore, neuromuscular
blocking agents should be given with caution to patients receiving lithium.
Usage in Pregnancy
Adverse effects on implantation in rats, embryo viability
in mice and metabolism in vitro of
rat testes and human spermatozoa have been attributed to lithium, as have
teratogenicity in submammalian species and cleft palates in mice.
In
humans, lithium carbonate may cause fetal harm when administered to a pregnant
woman. Data from lithium birth registries suggest an increase in cardiac and
other anomalies, especially Ebstein’s anomaly. If this drug is used
in women of childbearing potential, or during pregnancy, or if a patient becomes
pregnant while taking this drug, the patient should be apprised of the potential
hazard to the fetus.
Usage in Nursing Mothers
Lithium is excreted in human milk. Nursing should not be
undertaken during lithium therapy except in rare and unusual circumstances
where, in the view of the physician, the potential benefits to the mother
outweigh possible hazards to the child.
Usage in Pediatric Patients
Since information regarding the safety and effectiveness
of lithium carbonate in children under 12 years of age is not available,
its use in such patients is not recommended.
There
has been a report of a transient syndrome of acute dystonia and hyperreflexia
occurring in a 15 kg child who ingested 300 mg of lithium carbonate.
Usage in the Elderly
Elderly patients often require lower lithium dosages to
achieve therapeutic serum levels. They may also exhibit adverse reactions
at serum levels ordinarily tolerated by younger patients.
Precautions
General
The ability to tolerate lithium is greater during the acute
manic phase and decreases when manic symptoms subside (see DOSAGE AND ADMINISTRATION).
The
distribution space of lithium approximates that of total body water. Lithium
is primarily excreted in urine with insignificant excretion in feces. Renal
excretion of lithium is proportional to its plasma concentration. The half-life
of elimination of lithium is approximately 24 hours. Lithium decreases
sodium reabsorption by the renal tubules which could lead to sodium depletion.
Therefore, it is essential for the patient to maintain a normal diet, including
salt, and an adequate fluid intake (2,500 to 3,000 mL) at least during
the initial stabilization period. Decreased tolerance to lithium has been
reported to ensue from protracted sweating or diarrhea and, if such occur,
supplemental fluid and salt should be administered under careful medical supervision
and lithium intake reduced or suspended until the condition is resolved.
In
addition to sweating and diarrhea, concomitant infection with elevated temperatures
may also necessitate a temporary reduction or cessation of medication.
Previously
existing underlying thyroid disorders do not necessarily constitute a contraindication
to lithium treatment; where hypothyroidism exists, careful monitoring of thyroid
function during lithium stabilization and maintenance allows for correction
of changing thyroid parameters, if any; where hypothyroidism occurs during
lithium stabilization and maintenance, supplemental thyroid treatment may
be used.
Drug Interactions
Caution should be used when lithium and diuretics are used
concomitantly because diuretic-induced sodium loss may reduce the renal clearance
of lithium and increase serum lithium levels with risk of lithium toxicity.
Patients receiving such combined therapy should have serum lithium levels
monitored closely and the lithium dosage adjusted if necessary.
Lithium
levels should be closely monitored when patients initiate or discontinue NSAID
use. In some cases, lithium toxicity has resulted from interactions between
an NSAID and lithium. Indomethacin and piroxicam have been reported to increase
significantly steady-state plasma lithium concentrations. There is also evidence
that other nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory agents, including the selective
cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2) inhibitors, have the same effect. In a study conducted
in healthy subjects, mean steady-state lithium plasma levels increased approximately
17% in subjects receiving lithium 450 mg b.i.d. with celecoxib 200 mg
b.i.d. as compared to subjects receiving lithium alone.
Concurrent
use of metronidazole with lithium may provoke lithium toxicity due to reduced
renal clearance. Patients receiving such combined therapy should be monitored
closely.
There is evidence that angiotensin-converting
enzyme inhibitors, such as enalapril and captopril, and angiotension II receptor
antagonists, such as losartan, may substantially increase steady-state plasma
lithium levels, sometimes resulting in lithium toxicity. When such combinations
are used, lithium dosage may need to be decreased, and plasma lithium levels
should be measured more often.
Concurrent use of calcium
channel blocking agents with lithium may increase the risk of neurotoxicity
in the form of ataxia, tremors, nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, and/or tinnitus.
Caution is recommended.
The concomitant administration
of lithium with selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors should be undertaken
with caution as this combination has been reported to result in symptoms such
as diarrhea, confusion, tremor, dizziness, and agitation.
The
following drugs can lower serum lithium concentrations by increasing urinary
lithium excretion: acetazolamide, urea, xanthine preparations, and alkalinizing
agents such as sodium bicarbonate.
The following have
also been shown to interact with lithium: methyldopa, phenytoin, and carbamazepine.
Adverse Reactions
The occurrence and severity of adverse reactions are generally
directly related to serum lithium concentrations as well as to individual
patient sensitivity to lithium, and generally occur more frequently and with
greater severity at higher concentrations.
Adverse
reactions may be encountered at serum lithium levels below 1.5 mEq/L.
Mild to moderate adverse reactions may occur at levels from 1.5 to 2.5 mEq/L,
and moderate to severe reactions may be seen at levels of 2.0 mEq/L and
above.
Fine hand tremor, polyuria, and mild thirst
may occur during initial therapy for the acute manic phase, and may persist
throughout treatment. Transient and mild nausea and general discomfort may
also appear during the first few days of lithium administration.
These
side effects usually subside with continued treatment or a temporary reduction
or cessation of dosage. If persistent, cessation of lithium therapy may be
required.
Diarrhea, vomiting, drowsiness, muscular
weakness, and lack of coordination may be early signs of lithium intoxication,
and can occur at lithium levels below 2.0 mEq/L. At higher levels, ataxia,
giddiness, tinnitus, blurred vision, and a large output of dilute urine may
be seen. Serum lithium levels above 3.0 mEq/L may produce a complex clinical
picture, involving multiple organs and organ systems. Serum lithium levels
should not be permitted to exceed 2.0 mEq/L during the acute treatment
phase.
The following reactions have been reported and
appear to be related to serum lithium levels, including levels within the
therapeutic range:
Neuromuscular/Central Nervous System
Tremor, muscle hyperirritability (fasciculations, twitching,
clonic movements of whole limbs), hypertonicity, ataxia, choreo-athetotic
movements, hyperactive deep tendon reflex, extrapyramidal symptoms including
acute dystonia, cogwheel rigidity, blackout spells, epileptiform seizures,
slurred speech, dizziness, vertigo, downbeat nystagmus, incontinence of urine
or feces, somnolence, psychomotor retardation, restlessness, confusion, stupor,
coma, tongue movements, tics, tinnitus, hallucinations, poor memory, slowed
intellectual functioning, startled response, worsening of organic brain syndromes,
myasthenia gravis (rarely).
Cardiovascular
Cardiac arrhythmia, hypotension, peripheral circulatory
collapse, bradycardia, sinus node dysfunction with severe bradycardia (which
may result in syncope).
Gastrointestinal
Anorexia, nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, gastritis, salivary
gland swelling, abdominal pain, excessive salivation, flatulence, indigestion.
Genitourinary
Glycosuria, decreased creatinine clearance, albuminuria,
oliguria, and symptoms of nephrogenic diabetes insipidus including polyuria,
thirst and polydipsia.
Dermatologic
Drying and thinning of hair, alopecia, anesthesia of skin,
acne, chronic folliculitis, xerosis cutis, psoriasis or its exacerbation,
generalized pruritus with or without rash, cutaneous ulcers, angioedema.
Autonomic
Blurred vision, dry mouth, impotence/sexual dysfunction.
Thyroid Abnormalities
Euthyroid goiter and/or hypothyroidism (including myxedema)
accompanied by lower T3 and T4. I131 uptake
may be elevated. (See PRECAUTIONS.) Paradoxically, rare cases of hyperthyroidism
have been reported.
EEG Changes
Diffuse slowing, widening of the frequency spectrum, potentiation
and disorganization of background rhythm.
EKG Changes
Reversible flattening, isoelectricity or inversion of T-waves.
Miscellaneous
Fatigue, lethargy, transient scotomata, exophthalmos, dehydration,
weight loss, leukocytosis, headache, transient hyperglycemia, hypercalcemia,
hyperparathyroidism, excessive weight gain, edematous swelling of ankles or
wrists, metallic taste, dysgeusia/taste distortion, salty taste, thirst, swollen
lips, tightness in chest, swollen and/or painful joints, fever, polyarthralgia,
dental caries.
Some reports of nephrogenic diabetes
insipidus, hyperparathyroidism, and hypothyroidism which persist after lithium
discontinuation have been received.
A few reports have
been received of the development of painful discoloration of fingers and toes
and coldness of the extremities within one day of the starting of treatment
with lithium. The mechanism through which these symptoms (resembling Raynaud’s
syndrome) developed is not known. Recovery followed discontinuance.
Cases
of pseudotumor cerebri (increased intracranial pressure and papilledema) have
been reported with lithium use. If undetected, this condition may result in
enlargement of the blind spot, constriction of visual fields, and eventual
blindness due to optic atrophy. Lithium should be discontinued, if clinically
possible, if this syndrome occurs.
Eskalith Dosage and Administration
Immediate-release capsules are usually given t.i.d. or q.i.d.
Doses of controlled-release tablets are usually given b.i.d. (approximately
12-hour intervals). When initiating therapy with immediate-release or controlled-release
lithium, dosage must be individualized according to serum levels and clinical
response.
When switching a patient from immediate-release
capsules to Eskalith CR Controlled-Release Tablets, give the same total
daily dose when possible. Most patients on maintenance therapy are stabilized
on 900 mg daily, e.g., Eskalith CR 450 mg b.i.d. When the previous
dosage of immediate-release lithium is not a multiple of 450 mg, e.g.,
1,500 mg, initiate Eskalith CR at the multiple of 450 mg nearest
to, but below, the original daily dose,
i.e., 1,350 mg. When the 2 doses are unequal, give the larger dose in
the evening. In the above example, with a total daily dose of 1,350 mg,
generally 450 mg of Eskalith CR should be given in the morning and
900 mg of Eskalith CR in the evening. If desired, the total daily
dose of 1,350 mg can be given in 3 equal 450-mg doses of Eskalith CR.
These patients should be monitored at 1- to 2-week intervals, and dosage adjusted
if necessary, until stable and satisfactory serum levels and clinical state
are achieved.
When patients require closer titration
than that available with doses of Eskalith CR in increments of 450 mg,
immediate-release capsules should be used.
Acute Mania
Optimal patient response to Eskalith can usually be established
and maintained with 1,800 mg per day in divided doses. Such doses will
normally produce the desired serum lithium level ranging between 1.0 and 1.5 mEq/L.
Dosage
must be individualized according to serum levels and clinical response. Regular
monitoring of the patient’s clinical state and serum lithium levels
is necessary. Serum levels should be determined twice per week during the
acute phase, and until the serum level and clinical condition of the patient
have been stabilized.
Long-Term Control
The desirable serum lithium levels are 0.6 to 1.2 mEq/L.
Dosage will vary from one individual to another, but usually 900 mg to 1,200 mg
per day in divided doses will maintain this level. Serum lithium levels in
uncomplicated cases receiving maintenance therapy during remission should
be monitored at least every two months.
Patients unusually
sensitive to lithium may exhibit toxic signs at serum levels below 1.0 mEq/L.
N.B.: Blood samples for serum lithium determinations
should be drawn immediately prior to the next dose when lithium concentrations
are relatively stable (i.e., 8 to 12 hours after the previous dose).
Total reliance must not be placed on serum levels alone. Accurate patient
evaluation requires both clinical and laboratory analysis.
Elderly
patients often respond to reduced dosage, and may exhibit signs of toxicity
at serum levels ordinarily tolerated by younger patients.
Overdosage
The toxic levels for lithium are close to the therapeutic
levels. It is therefore important that patients and their families be cautioned
to watch for early toxic symptoms and to discontinue the drug and inform the
physician should they occur. Toxic symptoms are listed in detail under ADVERSE
REACTIONS.
Treatment
No specific antidote for lithium
poisoning is known. Early symptoms of lithium toxicity can usually be treated
by reduction or cessation of dosage of the drug and resumption of the treatment
at a lower dose after 24 to 48 hours. In severe cases of lithium poisoning,
the first and foremost goal of treatment consists of elimination of this ion
from the patient. Treatment is essentially the same as that used in barbiturate
poisoning: 1) gastric lavage, 2) correction of fluid and electrolyte imbalance,
and 3) regulation of kidney function. Urea, mannitol and aminophylline all
produce significant increases in lithium excretion. Hemodialysis is an effective
and rapid means of removing the ion from the severely toxic patient. Infection
prophylaxis, regular chest X-rays and preservation of adequate respiration
are essential.
How is Eskalith Supplied
Eskalith Capsules 300 mg are gray and yellow capsules imprinted with “Eskalith”
and “SB” on one side of each half of the capsule, in bottles
of 100 (NDC 0007-4007-20).
Eskalith
CR Tablets 450 mg areround,
yellow, biconvex, controlled-release tablets, debossed with “SKF”
and “J10” on one side and scored on the other side, in bottles
of 100 (NDC 0007-4010-20).
STORAGE CONDITIONS
Store at 25°C (77°F), excursions permitted to
15-30°C (59-86°F) [see USP Controlled Room Temperature].
Manufactured
by
Cardinal Health
Winchester,
KY 40391 for
GlaxoSmithKline
Research
Triangle Park, NC 27709
©2003, GlaxoSmithKline.
All rights reserved.
September 2003 EL:L50
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Revised: 05/2006
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