I took it for a year and a half, at doses ranging from 5mg/day to 10mg/day (all sublingual) for depression. It worked great for the melancholic/atypical side of the depression, improving and stabilizing my mood, restoring pleasure lost to consummatory anhedonia, and making it easier to break out of negative thought patterns.
It didn't do anything for the fatigue, anticipatory anhedonia, or lack of motivation. I later found that those symptoms were caused by seasonal affective disorder, and I had both melancholic depression AND seasonal affective disorder and the selegiline was only treating the melancholic depression. Bright light therapy was needed (and still is) to treat the seasonal affective disorder. But that's just me, and it's pretty rare for someone to have two separate mood disorders at the same time.
BTW brainjuice, I wouldn't call recurrent negative thinking "OCD" unless it was linked to the classic "have intrusive anxious thoughts -> try to suppress them, fail -> feel bad -> do ritual to relieve discomfort -> repeat" pattern that typifies OCD. Recurrent negative thinking is a huge feature of both clinical depression, where it's called rumination, and generalized anxiety disorder, where it's called uncontrolled worrying.
Edited by jadamgo, 23 February 2013 - 02:51 AM.