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Q. I have seen many studies involving SSRI's and agents such as Visken
(Pindolol) and BuSpar (Buspirone) to augment antidepressants. Most
studies seem very impressing as to the amount of increased efficacy
these combinations make.
They additionally seem to improve sexual side-effects and help somewhat
with anxiety and the "pooping out" effect of SSRI's, in addition to
their helpfulness in alleviating depression.
Is this true? Due these agents work and by what means? Do you augment
in your practice, and if so with what agents.
A. Augmentation looks better in articles than it does in real life. While the
occasional individual benefits a lot from augmentation, most folks get some
better but not as well as they want. There are a host of agents to use as
augmenting agents, and the choice depends on what symptoms are left. Anxiety
and obsessionality tend to respond well to buspirone, lethargy to stimulants,
and anxiety alone to gabapentin. It is best to try and find a single agent
that addresses all the symptoms before augmenting. For example, if anxiety
persists in the face of eliminated/reduced depression and obsessionality when
a patient is on a serotonin reuptake inhibitor, venlafaxine (Effexor) may be
a better choice of medication before adding on Neurontin (gabapentin) or
BuSpar (buspirone).

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