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Evidence is accumulating that cholinergic pathways in the brain help to regulate mood, and researchers have shown that intravenous scopolamine (an anticholinergic) is effective for moderate-to-severe depression (JW Psychiatry Mar 29 2010). This 6-week, Iranian, double-blind study tested whether oral scopolamine (0.5 mg twice daily), added to citalopram as an initial treatment produces greater antidepressant effects than citalopram plus placebo. Participants were 40 patients with moderate-to-severe major depression (baseline score on the 17-item Hamilton Rating Scale for Depression, ≥22).
At days 4, 28, and 42, patients receiving scopolamine augmentation had significantly greater reduction in symptoms than patients taking add-on placebo, with…