Case report
Confusion caused by dietary supplement lithium orotate
G. van Weringh, E.B. Uitvlugt, G.H.M. Ponjee, G. M. jalink
A 38-year-old woman was referred to our hospital with pelvic inflammatory disease. She had been diagnosed as having a tubo-ovarian abscess, for which antibiotic therapy with metronidazole and levofloxacin was indicated. Because the patient was already taking lithium she was prescribed clindamycin instead of metronidazole, a drug that interacts with lithium. For the same reason, naproxen could not be prescribed to reduce pain. However, the lithium taken by the patient turned out to be a dietary supplement containing lithium orotate which she had obtained via the Internet. Because the serum lithium level proved to be below 0.05 mmol/l clindamycin was still replaced by metronidazole, and naproxen could be started.