Cocaine

Cocaine is a powerfully addictive stimulant that directly affects the brain. Cocaine has been labeled the drug of the 1980s and '90s, because of its extensive popularity and use during this period. However, cocaine is not a new drug. In fact, it is one of the oldest known drugs. The pure chemical, cocaine hydrochloride, has been an abused substance for more than 100 years, and coca leaves, the source of cocaine, have been ingested for thousands of years.
Pure cocaine was first extracted from the leaf of the Erythroxylon coca bush, which grows primarily in Peru and Bolivia, in the mid-19th century. In the early 1900s, it became the main stimulant drug used in most of the tonics/elixirs that were developed to treat a wide variety of illnesses. Today, cocaine is a Schedule II drug, meaning that it has high potential for abuse, but can be administered by a doctor for legitimate medical uses, such as a local anesthetic for some eye, ear, and throat surgeries.
There are
basically two chemical forms of cocaine: the hydrochloride salt and the
"freebase." The hydrochloride salt, or powdered form of cocaine, dissolves in
water and, when abused, can be taken intravenously (by vein) or intranasally (in
the nose). Freebase refers to a compound that has not been neutralized by an
acid to make the hydrochloride salt. The freebase form of cocaine is smokable.
Cocaine is generally sold on the street as a fine, white, crystalline powder,
known as "coke," "C," "snow," "flake," or "blow." Street dealers generally
dilute it with such inert substances as cornstarch, talcum powder, and/or sugar,
or with such active drugs as procaine (a chemically-related local anesthetic) or
with such other stimulants as amphetamines.
Crack is
the street name given to the freebase form of cocaine that has been processed
from the powdered cocaine hydrochloride form to a smokable substance. The term
"crack" refers to the crackling sound heard when the mixture is smoked. Crack
cocaine is processed with ammonia or sodium bicarbonate (baking soda) and water,
and heated to remove the hydrochloride.
Because crack is smoked, the user experiences a high in less than 10 seconds.
This rather immediate and euphoric effect is one of the reasons that crack
became enormously popular in the mid 1980s. Another reason is that crack is
inexpensive both to produce and to buy.
In 1997, an
estimated 1.5 million Americans (0.7 percent of that age 12 and older) were
current cocaine users, according to the 1997 National Household Survey on Drug
Abuse (NHSDA). This number has not changed significantly since 1992, although it
is a dramatic decrease from the 1985 peak of 5.7 million cocaine users (3
percent of the population). Based upon additional data sources that take into
account users underrepresented in the NHSDA, the Office of National Drug Control
Policy estimates the number of chronic cocaine users at 3.6 million.
Adults 18 to 25 years old have a higher rate of current cocaine use than those
in any other age group. Overall, men have a higher rate of current cocaine use
than do women. Also, according to the 1997 NHSDA, rates of current cocaine use
were 1.4 percent for African Americans, 0.8 percent for Hispanics, and 0.6
percent for Caucasians.
Crack cocaine remains a serious problem in the United States. The NHSDA
estimated the number of current crack users to be about 604,000 in 1997, which
does not reflect any significant change since 1988.
The 1998
Monitoring the Future Survey, which annually surveys teen attitudes and recent
drug use, reports that lifetime and past-year use of crack increased among
eighth graders to its highest levels since 1991, the first year data were
available for this grade. The percentage of eighth graders reporting crack use
at least once in their lives increased from 2.7 percent in 1997 to 3.2 percent
in 1998. Past-year use of crack also rose slightly among this group, although no
changes were found for other grades.
Data from the Drug Abuse Warning Network (DAWN) showed that cocaine-related
emergency room visits, after increasing 78 percent between 1990 and 1994,
remained level between 1994 and 1996, with 152,433 cocaine-related episodes
reported in 1996.
The
principal routes of cocaine administration are oral, intranasal, intravenous,
and inhalation. The slang terms for these routes are, respectively, "chewing,"
"snorting," "mainlining," "injecting," and "smoking" (including freebase and
crack cocaine). Snorting is the process of inhaling cocaine powder through the
nostrils, where it is absorbed into the bloodstream through the nasal tissues.
Injecting releases the drug directly into the bloodstream, and heightens the
intensity of its effects. Smoking involves the inhalation of cocaine vapor or
smoke into the lungs, where absorption into the bloodstream is as rapid as by
injection. The drug can also be rubbed onto mucous tissues. Some users combine
cocaine powder or crack with heroin in a "speedball."
Cocaine use ranges from occasional use to repeated or compulsive use, with a
variety of patterns between these extremes. There is no safe way to use cocaine.
Any route of administration can lead to absorption of toxic amounts of cocaine,
leading to acute cardiovascular or cerebrovascular emergencies that could result
in sudden death. Repeated cocaine use by any route of administration can produce
addiction and other adverse health consequences.
A great amount of research has been devoted to understanding the way cocaine produces its pleasurable effects, and the reasons it is so addictive. One mechanism is through its effects on structures deep in the brain. Scientists have discovered regions within the brain that, when stimulated, produce feelings of pleasure. One neural system that appears to be most affected by cocaine originates in a region, located deep within the brain, called the ventral tegmental area (VTA). Nerve cells originating in the VTA extend to the region of the brain known as the nucleus accumbens, one of the brain's key pleasure centers. In studies using animals, for example, all types of pleasurable stimuli, such as food, water, sex, and many drugs of abuse, cause increased activity in the nucleus accumbens.
Cocaine's
effects appear almost immediately after a single dose, and disappear within a
few minutes or hours. Taken in small amounts (up to 100 mg), cocaine usually
makes the user feel euphoric, energetic, talkative, and mentally alert,
especially to the sensations of sight, sound, and touch. It can also temporarily
decrease the need for food and sleep. Some users find that the drug helps them
to perform simple physical and intellectual tasks more quickly, while others can
experience the opposite effect.
The duration of cocaine's immediate euphoric effects depends upon the route of
administration. The faster the absorption, the more intense the high. Also,
faster the absorption shorter the duration of action. The high from snorting is
relatively slow in onset, and may last 15 to 30 minutes, while that from smoking
may last 5 to 10 minutes.
The short-term physiological effects of cocaine include constricted blood
vessels; dilated pupils; and increased temperature, heart rate, and blood
pressure. Large amounts (several hundred milligrams or more) intensify the
user's high, but may also lead to bizarre, erratic, and violent behavior. These
users may experience tremors, vertigo, muscle twitches, paranoia, or, with
repeated doses, a toxic reaction closely resembling amphetamine poisoning. Some
users of cocaine report feelings of restlessness, irritability, and anxiety. In
rare instances, sudden death can occur on the first use of cocaine or
unexpectedly thereafter. Cocaine-related deaths are often a result of cardiac
arrest or seizures followed by respiratory arrest.
Cocaine is a powerfully addictive drug. Once having tried cocaine, an individual may have difficulty predicting or controlling the extent to which he or she will continue to use the drug. Cocaine's stimulant and addictive effects are thought to be primarily a result of its ability to inhibit the re absorption of dopamine by nerve cells. Dopamine is released as part of the brain's reward system, and is either directly or indirectly involved in the addictive properties of every major drug of abuse.
An
appreciable tolerance to cocaine's high may develop, with many addicts reporting
that they seek but fail to achieve as much pleasure as they did from their first
experience. Some users will frequently increase their doses to intensify and
prolong the euphoric effects. While tolerance to the high can occur, users can
also become more sensitive (sensitization) to cocaine's anesthetic and
convulsing effects, without increasing the dose taken. This increased
sensitivity may explain some deaths occurring after apparently low doses of
cocaine.
Use of cocaine in a binge, during which the drug is taken repeatedly and at
increasingly high doses, leads to a state of increasing irritability,
restlessness, and paranoia. This may result in a full-blown paranoid psychosis,
in which the individual loses touch with reality and experiences auditory
hallucinations.
There are enormous medical complications associated with cocaine use. Some of the most frequent complications are cardiovascular effects, including disturbances in heart rhythm and heart attacks; such respiratory effects as chest pain and respiratory failure; neurological effects, including strokes, seizure, and headaches; and gastrointestinal complications, including abdominal pain and nausea.
Cocaine
use has been linked to many types of heart disease. Cocaine has been found to
trigger chaotic heart rhythms, called ventricular fibrillation; accelerate
heartbeat and breathing; and increase blood pressure and body temperature.
Physical symptoms may include chest pain, nausea, blurred vision, fever, muscle
spasms, convulsions and coma.
Different routes of cocaine administration can produce different adverse
effects. Regularly snorting cocaine, for example, can lead to loss of sense of
smell, nosebleeds, problems with swallowing, hoarseness, and an overall
irritation of the nasal septum, which can lead to a chronically inflamed, runny
nose. Ingested cocaine can cause severe bowel gangrene, due to reduced blood
flow. And, persons who inject cocaine have puncture marks and "tracks," most
commonly in their forearms. Intravenous cocaine users may also experience an
allergic reaction, either to the drug, or to some additive in street cocaine,
which can result, in severe cases, in death. Because cocaine has a tendency to
decrease food intake, many chronic cocaine users lose their appetites and can
experience significant weight loss and malnourishment.
Research has revealed a potentially dangerous interaction between cocaine and
alcohol. Taken in combination, the two drugs are converted by the body to
cocaethylene. Cocaethylene has a longer duration of action in the brain and is
more toxic than either drug alone. While more research needs to be done, it is
noteworthy that the mixture of cocaine and alcohol is the most common two-drug
combination that results in drug-related death.
Yes.
Cocaine abusers, especially those who inject, are at increased risk for
contracting such infectious diseases as human immunodeficiency virus (HIV/AIDS)
and hepatitis. In fact, use and abuse of illicit drugs, including crack cocaine,
have become the leading risk factors for new cases of HIV. Drug abuse-related
spread of HIV can result from direct transmission of the virus through the
sharing of contaminated needles and paraphernalia between injecting drug users.
It can also result from indirect transmission, such as an HIV-infected mother
transmitting the virus perinatally to her child. This is particularly alarming,
given that more than 60 percent of new AIDS cases are women. Research has also
shown that drug use can interfere with judgement about risk-taking behavior, and
can potentially lead to reduced precautions about having sex, the sharing of
needles and injection paraphernalia, and the trading of sex for drugs, by both
men and women.
Additionally, hepatitis C is spreading rapidly among injection drug users;
current estimates indicate infection rates of 65 to 90 percent in this
population. At present, there is no vaccine for the hepatitis C virus, and the
only treatment is expensive, often unsuccessful, and may have serious side
effects.
The full
extent of the effects of prenatal drug exposure on a child is not completely
known, but many scientific studies have documented that babies born to mothers
who abuse cocaine during pregnancy are often prematurely delivered, have low
birth weights and smaller head circumferences, and are often shorter in length.
Estimating the full extent of the consequences of maternal drug abuse is
difficult, and determining the specific hazard of a particular drug to the
unborn child is even more problematic, given that, typically, more than one
substance is abused. Such factors as the amount and number of all drugs abused;
inadequate prenatal care; abuse and neglect of the children, due to the mother's
lifestyle; socio-economic status; poor maternal nutrition; other health
problems; and exposure to sexually transmitted diseases, are just some examples
of the difficulty in determining the direct impact of perinatal cocaine use, for
example, on maternal and fetal outcome.
Many may recall that "crack babies," or babies born to mothers who used cocaine
while pregnant, were written off by many a decade ago as a lost generation. They
were predicted to suffer from severe, irreversible damage, including reduced
intelligence and social skills. It was later found that this was a gross
exaggeration. Most crack-exposed babies appear to recover quite well. However,
the fact that most of these children appear normal should not be
over-interpreted as a positive sign. Using sophisticated technologies,
scientists are now finding that exposure to cocaine during fetal development may
lead to subtle, but significant, deficits later, especially with behaviors that
are crucial to success in the classroom, such as blocking out distractions and
concentrating for long periods of time.
There has been an enormous increase in the number of people seeking treatment for cocaine addiction during the 1980s and 1990s. Treatment providers in most areas of the country, except in the West and Southwest, report that cocaine is the most commonly cited drug of abuse among their clients. The majority of individuals seeking treatment smoke crack, and are likely to be poly-drug users, or users of more than one substance. The widespread abuse of cocaine has stimulated extensive efforts to develop treatment programs for this type of drug abuse. Cocaine abuse and addiction is a complex problem involving biological changes in the brain as well as a myriad of social, familial, and environmental factors. Therefore, treatment of cocaine addiction is complex, and must address a variety of problems. Like any good treatment plan, cocaine treatment strategies need to assess the psychobiological, social, and pharmacological aspects of the patient's drug abuse.