Abstract
Lithium administration raises the minimum sodium requirement of the organism. Lithium treated-rats drink spontaneously a hypertonic sodium chloride solution and thereby protect themselves against the toxic effects of lithium. In the present paper it was studied whether the consumption of sodium chloride can be used as a quantitative measure of the sodium requirement. Rats given different amounts of lithium with food for about 2 months were given free access to water and a 0.46 M NaCl solution, and the 24-h intake of the latter was followed. It was found that the consumption of hypertonic sodium chloride increased with the lithium dosage and the serum lithium level. The consumption showed the following characteristics: (a) It was sufficient to prevent death from lithium poisoning. (b) When access to hypertonic sodium chloride was discontinued for 48 h, the rats lost body weight; the body weight was reestablished within 1 h when the rats again had access to sodium chloride solution. (c) When sufficient amounts of sodium were given with the food, the lithium-treated rats drank no more sodium chloride solution than did the control rats. (d) When lithium administration was discontinued, the consumption of sodium chloride solution fell within 10 days to the control level. (e) The lithium-treated rats developed polyuria, but this was not the cause of the extra intake of sodium chloride. (f) The lithium-treated rats did not drink more of the hypertonic sodium chloride solution than was necessary to cover the minimum sodium requirement. The results indicate that the intake of hypertonic sodium chloride solution can, in fact, be used as a measure of the minimum sodium requirement in lithium-treated rats.
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Jensen, J., Thomsen, K. & Olesen, O.V. Current determination of lithium-induced minimum sodium requirement in rats. Psychopharmacologia 45, 295–299 (1976). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00421143
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00421143