LITHIUM TREATMENT DURING PREGNANCY, DELIVERY, AND LACTATION - AN UPDATE
- 1 October 1990
- journal article
- research article
- Vol. 51 (10) , 410-413
Abstract
Because prophylactic lithium treatment is often given to manic depressive women of fertile age, the answers to five questions are pressing: (1) Does lithium administration during pregnancy expose the unborn child to risk of malformations? (2) Does such exposure lead to later developmental anomalies? (3) Do changes in the pharmacokinetics of lithium during pregnancy and delivery require special precautions? (4) Does lithium treatment during pregnancy exert other effects? (5) Is it advisable that women in lithium treatment breastfeed their infants? The author discusses these questions in the light of present-day knowledge and proposes guidelines for lithium treatment during pregnancy, delivery, and lactation.This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- Pattern of Malformations in the Children of Women Treated with Carbamazepine during PregnancyNew England Journal of Medicine, 1989
- What happened later to the lithium babies? A FOLLOW‐UP STUDY OF CHILDREN BORN WITHOUT MALFORMATIONSActa Psychiatrica Scandinavica, 1976
- The effect of obstetric and perinatal events on risk of mental illness in women of childbearing age.American Journal of Public Health and the Nations Health, 1966