| COCAINE
Cocaine,
the most potent stimulant of natural origin, is extracted
from the leaves of the coca plant (Erythroxylon coca),
which is indigenous to the Andean highlands of South
America. Natives in this region chew or brew coca leaves
into a tea for refreshment and to relieve fatigue similar
to the customs of chewing tobacco and drinking tea or
coffee.
Pure cocaine was first isolated in the 1880s and used
as a local anesthetic in eye surgery. It was particulary
useful in surgery of the nose and throat because of
its ability to provide anesthesia as well as to constrict
blood vessels and limit bleeding. Many of its therapeutic
applications are now obsolete due to the development
of safer drugs.
Illicit cocaine is usually distributed as a white crystaline
powder or as an off-white chunky material. The powder,
usually cocaine hydrochloride, is often diluted with
a variety of substances, the most common of which are
sugars such as lactose, inositol and mannitol, and local
anesthetics such as lidocaine. The adulteration increases
the volume and thus multiplies profits. Cocaine hydrochloride
is generally snorted or dissolved in water and injected.
It is rarely smoked.
"Crack," the chunk or "rock" form
of cocaine, is a ready-to-use freebase. On the illicit
market it is sold in small, inexpensive dosage units
that are smoked. With crack came a dramatic increase
in drug abuse problems and violence. Smoking delivers
large quantities of cocaine to the lungs, producing
effects comparable to intravenous injection; these effects
are felt almost immediately after smoking, are very
intense, and are quickly over. Once introduced in the
mid-1980s, crack abuse spread rapidly and made the cocaine
experience available to anyone with $10 and access to
a dealer. In addition to other toxicities associated
with cocaine abuse, cocaine smokers suffer from acute
respiratory problems including cough, shortness of breath,
and severe chest pains with lung trauma and bleeding.
The intensity of the psychological effects of cocaine,
as with most psychoactive drugs, depends on the dose
and rate of entry to the brain. Cocaine reaches the
brain through the snorting method in three to five minutes.
Intravenous injection of cocaine produces a rush in
15 to 30 seconds and smoking produces an almost immediate
intense experience. The euphoric effects of cocaine
are almost indistinguishable from those of amphetamine,
although they do not last as long. These intense effects
can be followed by a dysphoric crash. To avoid the fatigue
and the depression of "coming down," frequent
repeated doses are taken. Excessive doses of cocaine
may lead to seizures and death from respiratory failure,
stroke, cerebral hemorrhage or heart failure. There
is no specific antidote for cocaine overdose.
According to the 1993 Household Drug Survey, the number
of Americans who used cocaine within the preceding month
of the survey numbered about 1.3 million; occasional
users (those who used cocaine less often than monthly)
numbered at approximately 3 million, down from 8.1 million
in 1985. The number of weekly users has remained steady
at around a half million since 1983.
[Abstracted from D.E.A. website q.v.]
| Cocaine |
| Effects |
| Euphoria! Feeling of super-normal
well-being and ability. Actually is strong adrenergic
and dopamine-ergic drug causing increased energy
and athletic ability! Cocaine has a very short plasma
half-life & is very addictive which explains
why cocaine abusers abuse so frequently and re-abuse
so quickly after a "hit." Aside from the
impairment involved, the most severe ill effect
is its effect on the heart's "timing"
system.... often causing life-threatening arrhythmias.
There have been many documented deaths caused by
Cocaine abuse |
| Incidence
of Abuse |
| THE "SECOND-MOST" ABUSED
OF THE NIDA-5 DRUGS! |
| Chemical
Name |
| Cocaine Alkaloid, extracted from Coca Plant, Erythroxylon
Coca |
| Forms
and Street Names |
Cocaine (Hydrochloride): Coke,
Flake, Snow, Happy dust, Gold dust, Cecil, C, Freebase,
Toot, White girl, Scotty. Crack Cocaine
(base or hydroxide): Crack, Rock, Base, Sugar
block.
When prepared for inhalation, "free base"
cocaine is called "crack." (because it
"crackles.") |
| Preferred
routes of administration |
| Most often "snorted." Sometimes
I.V. Inhalation ("smoking") of "crack"
cocaine much more popular & common in recent
years. It is poorly absorbed orally -- also topically.
Marijuana cigarettes laced with cocaine are called
Bazookas. |
| Length
of time detectable after user |
Usually 2-4 days "B-E"
actually has a longer half-life often resulting
in very high (100's of thousands) urine levels. |
| Metabolite
Actually sought in urine |
| Benzoyl-ecgonine or "B-E" |
| Confounding
drugs (or factors): |
| None known w/ gc/ms. Some of the
various '...caine" drugs may confound Immunoassay? |
| Screening
Cut-off: |
| 300 ng/ml |
| Confirmation
GC/MS Cut-off: |
| 150 ng/ml |
| Facts
for Verifying M.R.O |
MEDICAL USES??
YES! TAC solution (Tetracaine-Adrenalin-Cocaine)
is frequently used in the Emergency Room for local
anesthesia for laceration repair. Also, topical
Cocaine is used in ENT work as topical naso-pharyngeal
anesthetic. PASSIVE INHALATION??
NO! "Crack house" or similar claims are
NOT VALID CLAIMS!
TOPICAL ABSORPTION??
YES! Policemen have tested "positive"
after prolonged handling of cocaine powder!
HEALTH INCA TEA??
YES! This product, once legally imported from
South America, does contain cocaine. It has been
illegal for many years and safety-conscious employees
should know to avoid it! It is a "WEAK CLAIM"
most likely to be tried by the "savvy"
Cocaine Abuser. .
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