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Details

Stereochemistry ACHIRAL
Molecular Formula F.Li
Molecular Weight 25.939
Optical Activity NONE
Defined Stereocenters 0 / 0
E/Z Centers 0
Charge 0

SHOW SMILES / InChI
Structure of LITHIUM FLUORIDE

SMILES

[Li+].[F-]

InChI

InChIKey=PQXKHYXIUOZZFA-UHFFFAOYSA-M
InChI=1S/FH.Li/h1H;/q;+1/p-1

HIDE SMILES / InChI

Molecular Formula FH
Molecular Weight 20.00634
Charge 0
Count
Stereochemistry ACHIRAL
Additional Stereochemistry No
Defined Stereocenters 0 / 0
E/Z Centers 0
Optical Activity NONE

Molecular Formula Li
Molecular Weight 6.941
Charge 1
Count
Stereochemistry ACHIRAL
Additional Stereochemistry No
Defined Stereocenters 0 / 0
E/Z Centers 0
Optical Activity NONE

Description
Curator's Comment: Description was created based on several sources, including https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19538681 | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23371914 | http://www.rsc.org/periodic-table/element/3/lithium

Lithium is an alkali metal widely used in industry. Lithium salts are indicated in the treatment of manic episodes of Bipolar Disorder. The use of lithium in psychiatry goes back to the mid-19th century. Early work, however, was soon forgotten, and John Cade is credited with reintroducing lithium to psychiatry for mania in 1949. Mogens Schou undertook a randomly controlled trial for mania in 1954, and in the course of that study became curious about lithium as a prophylactic for depressive illness. In 1970, the United States became the 50th country to admit lithium to the marketplace. The specific mechanisms by which lithium exerts its mood-stabilizing effects are not well understood. Lithium appears to preserve or increase the volume of brain structures involved in emotional regulation such as the prefrontal cortex, hippocampus and amygdala, possibly reflecting its neuroprotective effects. At a neuronal level, lithium reduces excitatory (dopamine and glutamate) but increases inhibitory (GABA) neurotransmission; however, these broad effects are underpinned by complex neurotransmitter systems that strive to achieve homeostasis by way of compensatory changes. For example, at an intracellular and molecular level, lithium targets second-messenger systems that further modulate neurotransmission. For instance, the effects of lithium on the adenyl cyclase and phospho-inositide pathways, as well as protein kinase C, may serve to dampen excessive excitatory neurotransmission. In addition to these many putative mechanisms, it has also been proposed that the neuroprotective effects of lithium are key to its therapeutic actions. In this regard, lithium has been shown to reduce the oxidative stress that occurs with multiple episodes of mania and depression. Further, it increases protective proteins such as brain-derived neurotrophic factor and B-cell lymphoma 2, and reduces apoptotic processes through inhibition of glycogen synthase kinase 3 and autophagy.

Originator

Curator's Comment: The first lithium mineral petalite, LiAlSi4O10, was discovered on the Swedish island of Utö by the Brazilian, Jozé Bonifácio de Andralda e Silva in the 1790s. It was observed to give an intense crimson flame when thrown onto a fire. In 1817, Johan August Arfvedson of Stockholm analysed it and deduced it contained a previously unknown metal, which he called lithium. He realised this was a new alkali metal and a lighter version of sodium. However, unlike sodium he was not able to separate it by electrolysis. In 1821 William Brande obtained a tiny amount this way but not enough on which to make measurements. It was not until 1855 that the German chemist Robert Bunsen and the British chemist Augustus Matthiessen obtained it in bulk by the electrolysis of molten lithium chloride.

Approval Year

Targets

Targets

Primary TargetPharmacologyConditionPotency
6.53 µM [IC50]
2.0 mM [Ki]
Target ID: O95861
Gene ID: 10380.0
Gene Symbol: BPNT1
Target Organism: Homo sapiens (Human)
0.3 mM [IC50]
Conditions

Conditions

ConditionModalityTargetsHighest PhaseProduct
Primary
LITHIUM CARBONATE

Approved Use

Lithium is indicated in the treatment of manic episodes of Bipolar Disorder.

Launch Date

1965
PubMed

PubMed

TitleDatePubMed
[Lithium therapy in manic depressive diseases in old age].
1975
Renal failure associated with acetazolamide therapy for glaucoma.
1975 Apr
[Lithium induced diabetes insipidus with response to antidiuretic hormone].
1975 Apr 28
[Treatment of drug-resistant depressive states with lithium gluconate].
1977 Mar
Lithium prevention of amphetamine-induced 'manic' excitement and of reserpine-induced 'depression' in mice: possible role of 2-phenylethylamine.
1978 Dec 8
Urothelial injury to the rabbit bladder from various alkaline and acidic solutions used to dissolve kidney stones.
1986 Jul
Experimental amitriptyline intoxication: treatment of cardiac toxicity with sodium bicarbonate.
1986 Sep
Incidence of hypotension associated with epidural anesthesia using alkalinized and nonalkalinized lidocaine for cesarean section.
1987 Nov
The effect of pH buffering on reducing the pain associated with subcutaneous infiltration of bupivicaine.
1991 Mar
Neutralizing pH of lidocaine reduces pain during Norplant system insertion procedure.
1995 May
Suppression of herpes simplex virus infections with oral lithium carbonate--a possible antiviral activity.
1996 Nov-Dec
Altered residual ATP content in rat brain cortex subcellular fractions following status epilepticus induced by lithium and pilocarpine.
1998 Dec
Oral sodium bicarbonate reduces proximal renal tubular peptide catabolism, ammoniogenesis, and tubular damage in renal patients.
1998 Mar
Lithium-induced nephrogenic diabetes insipidus.
1999 Jan-Feb
Clozapine, neuroleptic malignant syndrome, and pancerebellar syndrome.
1999 Nov-Dec
[Between efficiency and toxicity: the case of a patient improved by lithium who developed iatrogenic nephropathy].
1999 Sep-Oct
Seizure-induced neuronal necrosis: implications for programmed cell death mechanisms.
2000
Optimizing lithium treatment.
2000
A case of lithium-induced asterixis.
2000 Apr
Hypercalcemia, arrhythmia, and mood stabilizers.
2000 Apr
Remission of tardive dyskinesia after changing from flupenthixol to olanzapine.
2000 Aug
[Hyperthyroidism and hypercalcemia associated with lithium treatment].
2000 Jan
Negative regulation of T cell proliferation and interleukin 2 production by the serine threonine kinase GSK-3.
2000 Jul 3
Visual and auditory hallucinations with the association of bupropion and valproate.
2000 Mar
beta-amyloid peptide-induced death of PC 12 cells and cerebellar granule cell neurons is inhibited by long-term lithium treatment.
2000 Mar 31
[Myasthenic syndrome induced by lithium].
2000 May 27-Jun 3
Glomerular structure in lithium-induced chronic renal failure in rats.
2000 Oct
Altered expression of renal AQPs and Na(+) transporters in rats with lithium-induced NDI.
2000 Sep
Antidepressant-induced mania in bipolar patients: identification of risk factors.
2001 Apr
Lithium isotopes: differential effects on renal function and histology.
2001 Aug
Ataxia from lithium toxicity successfully treated with high-dose buspirone: a single-case experimental design.
2001 Aug
Influence of strain, sex and age on nephrotoxicity of lithium in a one-hour model in rats.
2001 Dec
The transient receptor potential protein homologue TRP6 is the essential component of vascular alpha(1)-adrenoceptor-activated Ca(2+)-permeable cation channel.
2001 Feb 16
Lithium-induced exacerbation of stutter.
2001 Jul-Aug
Bupropion manic induction during euthymia, but not during depression.
2001 Jun
[Nephrotic syndrome and lithium therapy].
2001 May 26
Aborted sudden death, transient Brugada pattern, and wide QRS dysrrhythmias after massive cocaine ingestion.
2001 Oct
Lithium use in octogenarians.
2001 Oct
[Lithium treatment and hyperparathyroidism].
2001 Sep 20
Steroid-induced mania in an adolescent: risk factors and management.
2001 Summer
Physostigmine, sodium bicarbonate, or hypertonic saline to treat diphenhydramine toxicity.
2002 Feb
Case report and review of the perinatal implications of maternal lithium use.
2002 Jul
A case of Parkinsonism due to lithium intoxication: treatment with Pramipexole.
2002 May
Hydroethidine detection of superoxide production during the lithium-pilocarpine model of status epilepticus.
2002 May
Sexual side effects associated with valproate.
2002 Oct
Status epilepticus induced by lithium-pilocarpine in the immature rat does not change the long-term susceptibility to seizures.
2002 Sep
Lithium-induced periodic alternating nystagmus.
2003 Jan 28
Nalidixic acid overdose and metabolic acidosis.
2006 Mar
G418-mediated ribosomal read-through of a nonsense mutation causing autosomal recessive proximal renal tubular acidosis.
2008 Sep
Evaluation of aggregating brain cell cultures for the detection of acute organ-specific toxicity.
2013 Jun
Patents

Sample Use Guides

Optimal patient response to Lithium Carbonate usually can be established and maintained with 600 mg t.i.d. Optimal patient response to Lithium Oral Solution usually can be established and maintained with 10 mL (2 full teaspoons) (16 mEq of lithium) t.i.d. Such doses will normally produce an effective 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 of 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.
Route of Administration: Oral
Although lithium at a high concentration (10 mM) activated β-catenin in different types of neurons, β-catenin shifted to the nucleus at a therapeutically relevant concentration (1 mM) only in thalamic neurons, both in vivo and in vitro.
Substance Class Chemical
Created
by admin
on Mon Mar 31 19:34:27 GMT 2025
Edited
by admin
on Mon Mar 31 19:34:27 GMT 2025
Record UNII
1485XST65B
Record Status Validated (UNII)
Record Version
  • Download
Name Type Language
NSC-12957
Preferred Name English
LITHIUM FLUORIDE
HSDB   INCI   MI  
INCI  
Official Name English
LITHIUM FLUORIDE [HSDB]
Common Name English
LITHIUM MONOFLUORIDE
Systematic Name English
LITHIUM FLUORIDE [MI]
Common Name English
LITHIUM FLUORIDE (LIF)
Common Name English
Code System Code Type Description
HSDB
651
Created by admin on Mon Mar 31 19:34:27 GMT 2025 , Edited by admin on Mon Mar 31 19:34:27 GMT 2025
PRIMARY
EPA CompTox
DTXSID10894119
Created by admin on Mon Mar 31 19:34:27 GMT 2025 , Edited by admin on Mon Mar 31 19:34:27 GMT 2025
PRIMARY
CAS
7789-24-4
Created by admin on Mon Mar 31 19:34:27 GMT 2025 , Edited by admin on Mon Mar 31 19:34:27 GMT 2025
PRIMARY
WIKIPEDIA
LITHIUM FLUORIDE
Created by admin on Mon Mar 31 19:34:27 GMT 2025 , Edited by admin on Mon Mar 31 19:34:27 GMT 2025
PRIMARY
SMS_ID
300000053409
Created by admin on Mon Mar 31 19:34:27 GMT 2025 , Edited by admin on Mon Mar 31 19:34:27 GMT 2025
PRIMARY
PUBCHEM
224478
Created by admin on Mon Mar 31 19:34:27 GMT 2025 , Edited by admin on Mon Mar 31 19:34:27 GMT 2025
PRIMARY
MESH
C027651
Created by admin on Mon Mar 31 19:34:27 GMT 2025 , Edited by admin on Mon Mar 31 19:34:27 GMT 2025
PRIMARY
NSC
12957
Created by admin on Mon Mar 31 19:34:27 GMT 2025 , Edited by admin on Mon Mar 31 19:34:27 GMT 2025
PRIMARY
ECHA (EC/EINECS)
232-152-0
Created by admin on Mon Mar 31 19:34:27 GMT 2025 , Edited by admin on Mon Mar 31 19:34:27 GMT 2025
PRIMARY
MERCK INDEX
m6857
Created by admin on Mon Mar 31 19:34:27 GMT 2025 , Edited by admin on Mon Mar 31 19:34:27 GMT 2025
PRIMARY Merck Index
DAILYMED
1485XST65B
Created by admin on Mon Mar 31 19:34:27 GMT 2025 , Edited by admin on Mon Mar 31 19:34:27 GMT 2025
PRIMARY
FDA UNII
1485XST65B
Created by admin on Mon Mar 31 19:34:27 GMT 2025 , Edited by admin on Mon Mar 31 19:34:27 GMT 2025
PRIMARY
Related Record Type Details
PARENT -> SALT/SOLVATE
PARENT -> SALT/SOLVATE