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Anticholinergic antidepressants?

Scopolamine as an antidepressant is a new one, but now that you mention it, it makes an odd sense that it could be marketed that way. People with dementia are often very happy. Scopolamine is an active ingredient in the datura, jimson weed, belladonna, and deadly nightshade family of white trumpet-flower plants with spiky seed pods. Let the insanity begin.

Conventional antidepressant treatments generally require three to four weeks to become effective, thus the discovery of treatments with a more rapid onset is a major goal of biological psychiatry. The first drug found to produce rapid improvement in mood was the NMDA glutamate receptor antagonist, ketamine.

In a new issue of Biological Psychiatry, published by Elsevier, researchers from the National Institutes of Health report that another medication, scopolamine, also appears to produce replicable rapid improvement in mood. Scopolamine temporarily blocks the muscarinic cholinergic receptor, thought to be overactive in people suffering from depression.

Drs. Wayne Drevets and Maura Furey recruited outpatients with major depressive disorder who were randomly assigned to receive placebo and then scopolamine treatment, or vice versa, in a double-blinded design so that neither the researchers nor the patients knew which treatment they were receiving.

"Scopolamine was found to reduce symptoms of depression within three days of the first administration. In fact, participants reported that they experienced relief from their symptoms by the morning after the first administration of drug," explained Dr. Furey. "Moreover, one-half of participants experienced full symptom remission by the end of the treatment period. Finally, participants remained well during a subsequent placebo period, indicating that the antidepressant effects persist for at least two weeks in the absence of further treatment."

Good idea or bad idea? I would love to hear any discussion on this topic.

Posted By jamesk at 2010-03-07 00:44:43 permalink | comments
Tags: antidepressant anticholinergic datura scopolamine
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K. : 2010-03-08 19:06:53
The older tricyclic antidepressants have strong anticholingergic (and antihistiminic) effects. These are blamed for their significant side-effect profile and are what lead to the development of SSRIs.

So, it's not a shock that anticholinergics might be a treatment approach to mood disorders but the side effects would suck big time.

Silas. : 2010-03-08 14:07:22
screw scopolamine, ill just stick with the ketamine, thanks
jim. : 2010-03-08 06:36:04
I will stick to pot, thanks.
dononamous. : 2010-03-07 02:47:01
I once had a multi day datura trip where I ate whole seeds after poppies, instead of making a tea.
After a mind blowing nod I got very sick with non ordinary painful flu symptoms but no nausea. I had extreme ordeal but there was a fantastic peak of stunning 'wholeness' at the end. Id never repeat swallowing seeds.
Johnathan. : 2010-03-07 01:14:12
The linked journal article is behind a paywall, so it's hard to read what was actually done. I'd be very interested in the dosage, and how it compares to say, the Transderm Scop patch behind the ear.

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