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Lithium Orotate: What the New Science Suggests (and What It Doesn’t)

Lithium Orotate: What the New Science Suggests (and What It Doesn’t)

Lithium is a naturally occurring element found in the Earth’s crust, trace amounts of water, soil, and certain foods.

It is not a synthetic drug—it exists in nature as a mineral salt and has been part of the human environment for thousands of years.

In medicine, lithium carbonate (prescription) is best known for its long-standing role in psychiatry, particularly in the treatment of bipolar disorder, mood instability, and suicide prevention. Its use in modern psychiatry dates back over 70 years.

This makes lithium carbonate (prescription version) one of the most well-studied treatments in mental health.

At CareSync Psych, lithium is understood through a mind–body, metabolic psychiatry lens, where brain chemistry, inflammation, kidney health, and overall physiology are all considered together.

Lithium Orotate

Lithium has one of the strongest evidence bases in psychiatry—especially for mood stabilization and suicide risk reduction. But lately, there’s growing buzz around a supplement form: lithium orotate.

So what does the research about lithium orotate say? Let’s start with-what is lithium orotate?


What is lithium orotate?

Lithium orotate is a compound where lithium is bound to orotic acid and is sold as a an over the counter dietary supplement (not a prescription medication). However, because it’s regulated differently than prescription lithium, dose consistency and quality can vary by product—and it may not be appropriate or safe for everyone (Devadason, 2018).

Potential benefits of lithium orotate

what early evidence suggests

1) Different pharmacokinetics may change potency

Preclinical work suggests lithium orotate may distribute differently in the body compared to lithium carbonate (commonly prescribed form), potentially delivering lithium to the brain more efficiently at lower doses in animal models. (Pacholko & Bekar, 2021).

2) Anti-manic effects displayed in mice model research.

In a mouse model of mania, lithium orotate showed anti-manic–like effects at lower elemental lithium doses than lithium carbonate—raising the question of whether it could be a more “potent” option in controlled settings (Pacholko & Bekar, 2023).

Is Lithium Orotate Safe to Take?

1) Human Research Trials of Lithium Orotate Are Still Very New and Limited

There are no large, high-quality human clinical trials establishing lithium orotate as a standard treatment for bipolar disorder, mania, or depression. Current discussion in the literature is cautious and exploratory (Devadason, 2018).

2) Safety and toxicity concerns remain real

A toxicological review highlights that safety depends on dose, duration, and exposure—and that “supplement” does not mean risk-free (Murbach et al., 2021).

3) Lithium is lithium—monitoring still matters

Prescription lithium requires careful monitoring because it can affect kidneys, thyroid, hydration/electrolytes, and interacts with common medications. The core clinical challenge is always balancing mental health benefits with renal safety (Strawbridge & Young, 2022).

Medication Management for Mental Health

Potential harms & interactions to know

Lithium (including lithium orotate or supplemental forms) could become unsafe with dehydration, illness, or interacting meds.

Major interaction categories include:

  • NSAIDs (ibuprofen/naproxen) → can raise lithium levels

  • ACE inhibitors / ARBs (common BP meds) → can raise lithium levels

  • Diuretics (especially thiazides) → can raise lithium levels

  • Dehydration, vomiting/diarrhea, heavy sweating → can raise lithium levels

  • Kidney disease or reduced kidney function → higher risk

  • Pregnancy/breastfeeding → requires specialist-level risk/benefit discussion

(General lithium safety principles; reinforced by clinical emphasis on renal balance in Strawbridge & Young, 2022.)

What is Metabolic Psychiatry?

Is lithium orotate ever recommended?

In mainstream psychiatric practice, lithium orotate is not a first-line or standard recommendation for bipolar disorder/mania because:

  • robust human trial evidence is lacking

  • supplement regulation and dose reliability vary

  • lithium still carries real interaction and organ-risk considerations

That said, the preclinical findings are interesting and may justify future clinical research—but for now, decisions should be individualized and medically supervised. (Devadason, 2018; Pacholko & Bekar, 2021; Pacholko & Bekar, 2023)


CareSync Psych take

If you’re considering lithium orotate because you want a “safer lithium,” here’s the safest framework:

✅ Don’t self-prescribe or combine with interacting meds
✅ Consider baseline labs and medical history (especially kidney/thyroid)
✅ Prioritize evidence-based options first
✅ If exploring supplements, do it with a clinician who understands lithium pharmacology

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Jennifer Sanri ARNP PMHNP-BC
Psychiatry

Jennifer Sanri ARNP PMHNP-BC

Psychiatry

At CareSync Psych, we honor every dimension of healing—biological, emotional, and spiritual.
We believe connection, compassion, and evidence-based medicine can coexist beautifully.

The CareSync Difference

Science meets Soul

Our mission is to help each individual sync mind and body to move beyond symptom management toward healing, self-actualization, and long-term wellness.

Why Choose CareSync Psych

  • Integrative and individualized care.

  • Evidence-based with compassionate delivery.

  • Rooted in lived experience and empathy.

  • Commitment to education and empowerment.

Therapy sessions that meet you where you are — not where you “should” be.

Evidence-Based Talk Therapy

  • Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT)

  • Exposure and Response Prevention (ERP)

  • Supportive Therapy

  • Interpersonal Therapy (IPT)

  • Mindfulness-Based Approaches

 

Founded on the principle that mental and physical health are inseparable.

  • Blends psychopharmacology, therapy, and metabolic psychiatry.

  • Individualized care rooted in self-experience, compassion, evidence, and holistic science.

Therapy sessions that meet you where you are — not where you “should” be.

Specialty Care Areas

Teens, Adults, and Older Adults

  • Anxiety Disorders & Panic Disorder

  • Depression & Mood Disorders

  • Obsessive–Compulsive Disorder (OCD)

  • Binge Eating & Food Addiction

  • ADHD

  • Trauma-Related Disorders

  • Sleep & Circadian Rhythm Disorders

Integrative Care Model

  • Psychiatry (Biological)

  • Psychotherapy (Psychological)

  • Nutrition + Lifestyle (Environmental & Metabolic)

All working together in sync to support sustainable mental health

Treating  the patient as a whole: – we consider psychological, physiological, social, and emotional factors. Accessible treatment – with in-person and HIPAA-compliant telehealth options.

Compassionate, Personalized Follow-Up

CareSync Psych emphasizes continuity of care — not symptom management, but transformation.

  • Regular progress assessments.

  • Medication and lifestyle adjustments.

  • Emotional and educational support at every visit.

CareSync Psych Approach

Integrated Care for Body and Mind

  • 🧠 Psychiatric Support: Targeted medication management to improve mood, energy, and focus.

  • 🌿 Metabolic Psychiatry: Address inflammation, nutrition, and metabolic imbalance impacting mental health.

  • 💬 Therapeutic Support: CBT, Supportive Therapy, and Acceptance-Based approaches for resilience and adjustment.

  • ❤️ Lifestyle Medicine: Nutrition, sleep, gentle movement, and mindfulness to improve quality of life.

Healing begins when we treat both the biology and the burden.

What makes CareSync Psych inclusive is not only the range of services but also our philosophy: to create a non-judgmental environment that patients feel safe, respected, and heard.

Chronic Illness & Mental Health

 When the Body Hurts, the Mind Responds


The Hidden Burden:
Living with chronic illness often brings persistent stress, uncertainty, and emotional fatigue.

  • Mind–Body Connection:
    Physical symptoms and inflammation can influence brain chemistry, increasing risk for anxiety, depression, and fatigue.

  • Cognitive Impact:
    Pain, medication side effects, and sleep disruption can alter concentration and memory, creating a cycle of frustration and hopelessness.

  • Social & Emotional Isolation:
    Ongoing symptoms can limit social life and work engagement—fostering shame or self-blame.


 

Patient-centered care: treatment plans are collaborative, built around your goals and values.

Metabolic Psychiatry & Lifestyle Interventions

Possible treatment Options: Nutrition & Ketogenic Interventions

  • Glucose/Ketone Monitoring

  • Sleep Optimization

  • Movement & Exercise Plans

  • Stress Management Techniques

  • Gut–Brain Health & Inflammation Control

“You cannot heal the mind without nurturing the body, nor heal the body without soothing the mind.”
— Jennifer Sanri, PMHNP-BC

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