Abstract
Male and female Long Evan rats and Brattleboro rats with ADH-deficient diabetes insipidus were treated with lithium administered in the diet for 12 weeks. The plasma lithium level was about 1 mmol/l in all groups. Lithium caused polydipsia and polyuria and lowering of renal concentrating ability in normal rats. In rats with ADH deficiency lithium tended to increase water intake, but did not influence spontaneous urine osmolality or maximal urine osmolality during water deprivation. The results indicate that the renal concentrating defect caused by lithium in rats can be explained by ADH-blockade as the only mechanism. However, there is circumstantial evidence that lithium in addition may stimulate thirst mechanisms by an ADH-independent action.