@ralpha4 and others on this message string @oldelectrician
Regarding lithium orotate pharmacokinetics, dosing, safety, adverse effects, and beneficial effects - these are unknowns, see following.
Lithium orotate you may buy over the counter at health food store or from an internet source are not FDA approved. The only way the FDA will look at a product is if you have an adverse effect and report it or ask your doctor or pharmacist to report the product. Adverse effects reports will typically include the manufacturer, lot, and expiration. The FDA would determine what chemicals are in the product only after adverse effects are reported, not before. Pharmokinetic data on dissolution, absorption, half life in blood and brain, and similar parameters are reported to FDA for approved drugs, but your nutritional supplement is not an approved drug so I don't believe you will be able to obtain pharmaceutical data from the company of manufacture - although you could certainly ask - otherwise you can guess and hope what is on the label is accurate in addition.
Country of origin for lithium orotate may not be on your bottle. Many pharmaceuticals and nutritional supplements originate from India and China - costs may increase with tariffs.
As hdeff mentioned above, "it's a guessing game" right now. Guessing until such time as a known FDA approved and researched product is available.
I do encourage anyone experiencing adverse effects to take the effort to report to FDA, ask a pharmacist for help if you have trouble completing the online FDA adverse effects report. Sad to say some nutritional supplements aren't what they are supposed to be; to repeat the FDA doesn't sample nutritional supplements unless a problem is reported. It's also true lithium orotate may have unexpected effects - keep in mind use of lithium in the past 100 years has been primarily higher doses of lithium carbonate for serious conditions such as bipolar disorder. Use of lithium orotate in people without bipolar disorder is a guess, arguably an educated guess, and investigational.
Best wishes, hopefully no one trying a nutritional supplement has adverse effects, but reports to FDA if they do.
Thanks for your reply, I never said lithium orotate was approved by FDA as it is only a food supplement, not regulated by FDA at all. The Office of Dietary Supplement (ODS) did not even issue an official daily intake quantity. It is a complete guessing game until next set of clinical trials are completed. At this time all we can do it take an educated guess based on available data and monitoring if any adverse reaction occurs during this self experimentation.