Difference between revisions of "Cocaine" - New World Encyclopedia

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{{drugbox
 
{{drugbox
| IUPAC_name = methyl3-benzoyloxy-8-methyl-8-azabicyclo [3.2.1]octane-4-carboxylate
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| Verifiedfields = changed
| image = {{PAGENAME}}.png
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| verifiedrevid = 477165921
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| IUPAC_name = methyl (1''R'',2''R'',3''S'',5''S'')-3- (benzoyloxy)-8-methyl-8-azabicyclo[3.2.1] octane-2-carboxylate
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| image = Kokain_-_Cocaine.svg
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| width = 250
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| image2 = Cocaine3Dan.gif
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| width2 = 300
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<!--Clinical data—>
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| Drugs.com = {{drugs.com|CONS|cocaine}}
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| pregnancy_category = C
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| legal_AU = Schedule 8
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| legal_CA = Schedule I
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| legal_UK = A
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| legal_US = Schedule II
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| legal_UN = N I III
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| dependency_liability = High
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| routes_of_administration = [[Topical]], Oral, [[Insufflation (medicine)|Insufflation]], [[intravenous|IV]], PO
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<!--Pharmacokinetic data—>
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| bioavailability = Oral: 33%<ref name="fattinger2000">K. Fattinger, N. L. Benowitz, R. T. Jones, and D. Verotta, "Nasal Mucosal Versus Gastrointestinal Absorption of Nasally Administered Cocaine," ''Eur. J. Clin. Pharmacol.'' 56, iss. 4(2000): 305–10. PMID 10954344.</ref><br />[[Insufflation (medicine)|Insufflated]]: 60<ref>G. Barnett, R. Hawks, and R. Resnick, "Cocaine Pharmacokinetics in Humans," ''J Ethnopharmacol'' 3, issue 2–3(1981): 353–66. PMID 7242115.</ref>–80%<ref>A. R. Jeffcoat, M. Perez-Reyes, J. M. Hill, B. M. Sadler, and C. E. Cook, "Cocaine Disposition in Humans After Intravenous Injection, Nasal Insufflation (Snorting), or Smoking," ''Drug Metab. Dispos.'' 17, iss. 2(1989): 153–9. PMID 2565204.</ref><br />Nasal Spray: 25<ref>P. Wilkinson, C. Van Dyke, P. Jatlow, P. Barash, and R. Byck, "Intranasal and Oral Cocaine Kinetics," ''Clin. Pharmacol. Ther.'' 27, iss. 3(1980): 386–94. PMID 7357795.</ref>–43%<ref name="fattinger2000" />
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| metabolism = [[Hepatic]] [[CYP3A4]]
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| elimination_half-life = 1 hour
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| excretion = Renal (benzoylecgonine and ecgonine methyl ester)
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<!--Identifiers—>
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| CASNo_Ref = {{cascite|correct|CAS}}
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| CAS_number_Ref = {{cascite|correct|??}}
 
| CAS_number = 50-36-2
 
| CAS_number = 50-36-2
 
| ATC_prefix = N01
 
| ATC_prefix = N01
 
| ATC_suffix = BC01
 
| ATC_suffix = BC01
| ATC_supplemental = {{ATC|R02|AD03}}, {{ATC|S01|HA01}}, {{ATC|S02|DA02}}
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| ATC_supplemental = {{ATC|R02|AD03}}, {{ATC|S01|HA01}}, {{ATC|S02|DA02}}
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| ChEBI_Ref = {{ebicite|correct|EBI}}
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| ChEBI = 27958
 
| PubChem = 5760
 
| PubChem = 5760
| DrugBank = APRD00080
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| IUPHAR_ligand = 2286
| chemical_formula = C<sub>17</sub>H<sub>21</sub>NO<sub>4</sub>
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| DrugBank_Ref = {{drugbankcite|correct|drugbank}}
| molecular_weight = 303.353 g/mol
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| DrugBank = DB00907
| bioavailability = Oral: 33%<br/>Nasal: 19% (11%&ndash;26%)<ref name="pagliaros">{{cite book | first=Louis | last=Pagliaro | coauthors=Ann Marie Pagliaro | title=Pagliaros’ Comprehensive Guide to Drugs and Substances of Abuse | publisher=[[American Pharmacists Association]] | location=Washington, D.C. | year=2004 | id=ISBN 1582120668 | curly=true}}</ref>
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| ChemSpiderID_Ref = {{chemspidercite|correct|chemspider}}
| protein_bound =  
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| ChemSpiderID = 10194104
| metabolism = Liver
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| UNII_Ref = {{fdacite|correct|FDA}}
| elimination_half-life = 1 hour
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| UNII = I5Y540LHVR
| pregnancy_category = C
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| KEGG_Ref = {{keggcite|correct|kegg}}
| legal_status = US Schedule II (US); Class A (UK); Canadian Schedule I (CA)
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| KEGG = D00110
| routes_of_administration = Topical, Insufflation, IV, PO
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| ChEMBL_Ref = {{ebicite|changed|EBI}}
| excretion = Urine
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| ChEMBL = 120901
| dependency_liability = High
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 +
<!--Chemical data—>
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| C=17 | H=21 | N=1 | O=4
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| molecular_weight = 303.353&nbsp;g/mol
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| smiles = CN1[C@H]2CC[C@@H]1[C@H]([C@H](C2)OC(=O)c3ccccc3)C(=O)OC
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| InChI = 1/C17H21NO4/c1-18-12-8-9-13(18)15(17(20)21-2)14(10-12)22-16(19)11-6-4-3-5-7-11/h3-7,12-15H,8-10H2,1-2H3/t12-,13+,14-,15+/m0/s1
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| StdInChI_Ref = {{stdinchicite|correct|chemspider}}
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| StdInChI = 1S/C17H21NO4/c1-18-12-8-9-13(18)15(17(20)21-2)14(10-12)22-16(19)11-6-4-3-5-7-11/h3-7,12-15H,8-10H2,1-2H3/t12-,13+,14-,15+/m0/s1
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| StdInChIKey_Ref = {{stdinchicite | correct | chemspider}}
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| StdInChIKey = ZPUCINDJVBIVPJ-LJISPDSOSA-N
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| synonyms = methylbenzoylecgonine, benzoylmethylecgonine, ecgonine methyl ester benzoate, 2b-Carbomethoxy −3b-benzoyloxy tropane
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| melting_point = 98
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| boiling_point = 187
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| solubility = HCl: 1800–2500
 
}}
 
}}
:''This article is about the drug cocaine. For the blues song by [[J.J. Cale]] (later covered by [[Eric Clapton]]) see [[Cocaine (song)]]''.
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'''Cocaine''' is a [[crystalline]] [[tropane]] [[alkaloid]] (benzoylmethylecgonine, C<sub>17</sub>H<sub>21</sub>NO<sub>4</sub>) found in the [[leaf|leaves]] of the [[coca]] plant and best known in its concentrated form as an addictive, and generally illegal, psychoactive recreational [[drug]].
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Although the amount of cocaine in coca leaves is low, when this alkaloid is chemically extracted and concentrated it results in a powerful [[nervous system]] stimulant, which is generally used nasally, smoked, or injected. As such, cocaine can be highly addictive and have deleterious impacts on the [[brain]], [[heart]], [[respiratory system]], [[kidney]]s, sexual system, and [[gastrointestinal tract]]. In most countries, the production, distribution, sale, and possession of cocaine products is restricted and/or illegal. However, cocaine also has some medical use and in some countries is available by prescription for such purposes as external application to the [[skin]] to numb pain, although derivatives such as lidocaine and novocaine have largely replaced it.
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Use of concentrated cocaine yields pleasure through its interference with [[neurotransmitter]]s of the [[sympathetic nervous system]], such as blocking [[dopamine]] from being reabsorbed and thus resulting in continual stimulation. As such, cocaine subverts a natural system for experiencing pleasure and, ironically, the user can reach a state in which he or she has difficulty experiencing pleasure without the drug. In addition to medical problems from the drug, including sudden death, cocaine is one of the most addictive recreational drugs and intense cravings can be created even after one use. The use of cocaine can create a tolerance, requiring an increasing dose for stimulation.
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There is a huge worldwide market for cocaine. The United Nations Office of Drugs and Crime estimated that in 2009 the US cocaine market was $37 billion and the West and Central European cocaine market was US$ 33 billion.
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For the plant, cocaine seems to serve a valuable function as an effective insecticide, limiting damage from [[herbivore|herbivorous]] [[insect]]s.
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==Overview==
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[[File:Tropane.png|thumb|150px|The chemical structure of [[tropane]]]]
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Cocaine is a [[tropane]] [[alkaloid]]. Tropane alkaloids are a class of alkaloids (naturally occurring chemical compounds that contain mostly basic [[nitrogen]] atoms) and secondary metabolites in which the chemical structure includes a tropane ring (nitrogenous bicyclic organic structure). Well-known alkaloids include [[caffeine]],  [[nicotine]],  [[morphine]], theobromine, mescaline, strychnine, [[quinine]], and [[codeine]]. Well-known tropane alkaloids, in addition to cocaine, include [[atropine]] and ecgonine (a precursor and metabolite of cocaine). Cocaine has the chemical formula C<sub>17</sub>H<sub>21</sub>NO<sub>4</sub> and is also known as benzoylmethylecgonine or methyl benzoyl ecgonine.
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Cocaine is found in [[coca]] plants, which are indigenous to South America. There are four varieties of these tropical [[plant]]s that are cultivated:  ''Erythroxylum coca'' var. ''coca'' (Bolivian or Huánuco coca), ''E. coca'' var. ''ipadu'' (Amazonian coca), ''E. novogranatense'' var. ''novogranatense'' (Colombian coca), and ''E. novogranatense'' var. ''truxillense'' (Trujillo coca).  The name cocaine comes from the name of the ''coca'' plant plus the alkaloid suffix ''-ine''.
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[[File:Colcoca01.jpg|thumb|left|170px|Coca shrub in Colombia]]
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Cocaine is the most concentrated of the dozen or more alkaloids that have been identified in the [[coca]] plant. Concentrations vary by variety and region, but leaves have been reported as having between 0.25% and 0.77% (Plowman and Rivier 1983), between 0.35% and 0.72% by dry weight (Nathanson et al. 1993), and between 0.3% and 1.5% and averaging 0.8% in fresh leaves (Casale and Klein 1993). In unprocessed form, coca leaves have been used for thousands of years in South America for various [[religion|religious]], social, [[medicine|medicinal]], and [[nutrition|nutritional]] purposes, including to control hunger and combat the impacts of high altitudes. However, since the alkaloid cocaine is present in only trace amounts in the leaves, it does not cause the euphoric and psychoactive effects associated with use of the drug. 
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When processed and concentrated by chemical extraction from large quantities of coca leaves, cocaine is a powerful [[stimulant]]. The extract from the leaves is hydrolysed and esterified with methanol and benzoic acid to produce the hydrochloride salt of cocaine.
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Biologically, cocaine acts as a serotonin–norepinephrine–dopamine reuptake inhibitor, also known as a triple reuptake inhibitor (TRI). For example, Marieb and Hoehn (2010) note the impact of cocaine hooking up to the dopamine reuptake transporter protein, thus blocking reabsorption of [[dopamine]]. With this [[neurotransmitter]] remaining in the synapse, the post-synaptic receptor cells are stimulated again and again, allowing the body to experience over and over this reward system and associated high, along with increased heart rate, sexual appetite, and blood pressure. However, as a result, the system releases less and less dopamine and the reward system goes dry, and the cocaine user, in addition to becoming anxious, find himself or herself "in a very real sense, unable to experience pleasure without the drug." However, more cocaine just suppresses dopamine release even more.
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Unlike most molecules, cocaine has pockets with both high [[hydrophilic]] and [[lipophilic efficiency]], violating the rule of [[hydrophilic-lipophilic balance]]. This causes it to cross the [[blood–brain barrier]] far better than other [[Psychoactive drug|psychoactive chemicals]] and may even induce blood-brain barrier breakdown (Sharma et al. 2009; Dietrich 2009). Marieb and Hoehn (2010) note that one way that might be developed to tackle addiction would be to prompt the [[immune system]] to bind cocaine molecules and prevent them from entering the brain.
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Cocaine is best known worldwide for its illegal use as a recreational drug. This concentrated form of cocaine is used ''nasally'' (nasal insufflation is also known as "snorting," "sniffing," or "blowing" and involves absorption through the mucous membranes lining the sinuses), ''injected'' (the method that produces the highest blood levels in the shortest time), or ''smoked'' (notably the cheaper, more potent form called "crack"). It may also be administered orally (rubbed on gums). Among forms of cocaine use are cocaine hydrochloride, natural leaf, cocaine paste, or freebase.
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Cocaine use can be highly addictive, causing intense cravings for the drug, and can have deleterious impacts on the [[brain]], [[heart]], [[respiratory system]], [[kidney]]s,  sexual system, and [[gastrointestinal tract]] (WebMD 2013a). For example, it can result in a heart attack or strokes, even in young people,and it can cause ulcers and sudden kidney failure, and it can impair sexual function (WebMD 2013a).
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The possession, distribution, and sale of cocaine products is illegal for non-medicinal / non-government sanctioned purposes in virtually all parts of the world. Internationally, it is  regulated by the Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs, and the United Nations Convention Against Illicit Traffic in Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances. In the United States, the manufacture, importation, possession, and distribution of cocaine is additionally regulated by the 1970 Controlled Substances Act. Cocaine is generally treated as a 'hard drug', with severe penalties for possession and trafficking.
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The United Nations Office of Drugs and Crime estimated that in 2009, the US cocaine market was $37 billion (and shrinking over the past ten years) and the West and Central European Cocaine market was US$ 37 billion (and increasing over the past ten years) (USODC 2011).
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The coca leaves have been used unprocessed for thousands of years in South America for various religious, social, medicinal, and nutritional purposes, including in the Andean countries to make a herbal tea with mild stimulant effects. However, since the alkaloid cocaine is present in only trace amounts in the leaves, it does not cause the euphoric and psychoactive effects associated with use of the drug. The Coca-Cola company uses a cocaine-free coca extract. In the early days of the manufacture of Coca-Cola beverage, the formulation did contain some cocaine, although within a few years of its introduction it already was only trace amounts. Cocaine is available as a prescription for such purposes as external application to the skin to numb pain.
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For the plant, cocaine is believed to serve as a naturally occurring insecticide, with the alkaloid exerting such effects at concentrations normally found in the leaves (Nathanson et. al. 1993). It has been observed that compared to other tropical plants, coca seems to be relatively pest free, with little observed damage to the leaves and rare observations of herbivorous [[insect]]s on plants in the field (Nathanson et al. 1993).
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== Medical effects==
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[[File:Rational scale to assess the harm of drugs (mean physical harm and mean dependence).svg|thumb|300px|Data from ''[[The Lancet]]'' suggests cocaine is ranked both the 2nd most addictive and the 2nd most harmful of 20 popular [[recreational drugs]].<ref>D. Nutt, L. A. King, W. Saulsbury, and C. Blakemore, [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17382831 "Development of a Rational Scale to Assess the Harm of Drugs of Potential Misuse"]. ''The Lancet'' 369, iss. 9566 (2007): 1047–1053. Retrieved September 3, 2013</ref>]]
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Cocaine acts in the [[brain]] on areas that acts to reward people with pleasure for behaviors important to survival individually and as a species, such as food, sex, and healthy pleasure (Marieb and Hoehn 2010; WebMD 2013a; Spanage and Weiss 1999). Involving the brain [[neurotransmitter]]s  in this area, it is a powerful [[nervous system]] stimulant (WHO 2004). Its effects can last from 15–30&nbsp;minutes to an hour or two, depending on dosage and the route of administration (WHO 2007; WebMD 2013a). However, it can have serious negative effects on the heart, brain, lungs, and emotions, including the danger of sudden death (WebMD). It was ranked the second most addictive and harmful recreational drug (of 20 studied) by Nutt et al. (2007), exceeded only by [[heroin]].
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On the one hand, users of cocaine report a euphoria (feeling "high"), with an increased sense of alertness, feelings of well-being, competence, and "supremacy," enhanced energy and motor activity, and sexuality (WebMD 2013a).
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On the other hand, some users report the high as also being accompanied with anxiety, irritability, paranoia, and restlessness, particularly during the comedown (WebMd 2013a). With excessive dosage or prolonged use, [[itch]]ing, [[tachycardia]], tremors, convulsions, [[hallucination]]s, and [[formication|paranoid delusions]] can result (WHO 2004; Zhao 2008). Overdoses cause [[hyperthermia]] (elevated body temperature) and a marked elevation of blood pressure. Cocaine constricts blood vessels, dilates the pupils, and increases heart rate and blood pressure.
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In terms of the [[circulatory system]], the increase of heart rate and blood pressure, while restricting arteries supplying blood, can result in a heart attack, even in youth without heart disease (WebMD 2013a). An abnormal heart rhythm called arrhythmia can be triggered. In terms of the [[brain]], the constriction of blood vessels in the brain can cause strokes, even in young people without other stroke risk factors (WebMD 2013a). Cocaine can double both the risks of hemorrhagic and ischemic strokes (Jeffrey and Vega 2008) and increase the risk of other infarctions, such as [[myocardial infarction]] (Vasica and Tennant 2002). Cocaine can cause seizures. Sudden death has been known to occur, such as the case of [[Len Bias]], considered by some as one of the greatest American college basketball athletes, who died two days after being drafted by the Boston Celtics because of a cardiac arrhythmia induced by use of cocaine.
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The constriction of blood vessels supplying the [[gastrointestinal tract]] can lead to oxygen starvation and the development of ulcers or perforation of the [[stomach]] and [[intestine]]s (WebMD 2013a). Cocaine use can also cause a wide array of [[kidney]] diseases and renal failure (Jaffe and Kimmel 2006; van der Woude 2000). Kidney failure can suddenly occur through a process known as rhabdomyolysis (WebMD 2013a).
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[[File:Side effects of chronic use of Cocaine.png|thumb|300px|left|Side effects of chronic cocaine use]]
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While sexual appetite may be increased, cocaine use can impair sexual function in men and women, including impaired ejaculation in men (WebMd 2013a).
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In terms of the [[lung]]s and [[respiratory system]], physical side effects from chronic smoking of cocaine include hemoptysis, bronchospasm, pruritus, fever, diffuse alveolar infiltrates without effusions, pulmonary and systemic [[eosinophilia]], chest pain, lung trauma, sore throat, asthma, hoarse voice, [[dyspnea]] (shortness of breath), and an aching, [[flu]]-like syndrome. Permanent lung damage can result in some users.
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The experience of insatiable hunger, aches, insomnia/oversleeping, lethargy, and persistent runny nose are often described as very unpleasant. Depression with suicidal ideation may develop in very heavy users.
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Chronic intranasal usage can degrade the [[cartilage]] separating the [[nostrils]] (the [[septum nasi]]), leading eventually to its complete disappearance. Due to the absorption of the cocaine from cocaine hydrochloride, the remaining hydrochloride forms a dilute hydrochloric acid (Pagliaro and Pagliaro 2004).
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Cocaine may also greatly increase this risk of developing rare autoimmune or connective tissue diseases such as [[lupus erythematosus|lupus]], [[Goodpasture's disease]], [[vasculitis]], [[glomerulonephritis]], [[Stevens–Johnson syndrome]] and other diseases (Trozak and Gould 1984; Peces et al. 1999; Moore and Richardson 1998).
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Cocaine often is a cause of involuntary tooth grinding, known as [[bruxism]], which can deteriorate tooth enamel and lead to [[gingivitis]] (Baigent 2003). Additionally, stimulants like cocaine, methamphetamine, and even caffeine cause dehydration and dry mouth. Since saliva is an important mechanism in maintaining one's oral pH level, chronic stimulant abusers who do not hydrate sufficiently may experience demineralization of their teeth due to the pH of the tooth surface dropping too low (below 5.5).
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[[File:Cocaine hydrochloride CII for medicinal use.jpg|thumb|upright|Cocaine hydrochloride]]
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Chronic cocaine intake causes brain cells to adapt functionally to strong imbalances of transmitter levels in order to compensate extremes. Thus, receptors disappear from the cell surface or reappear on it, resulting more or less in an "off" or "working mode" respectively, or they change their susceptibility for binding partners (ligands){{spaced ndash}}mechanisms called [[downregulation|down-]]/[[upregulation]]. Marieb and Hoehn (2010) state that the blocking of dopamine uptake by repeated use of cocaine causes the reward system to effectively go dry, as the system releases less and less dopamine, and "the cocaine user becomes anxious and, in a very real sense, unable to experience pleasure without the drug." As the postsynaptic cells sprout new receptors to pick up the dopamine signals, a vicious cycle begins where cocaine "is needed to experience pleasure, but using it suppresses dopamine release even more" (Marieb and Hoehn 2010).  A loss of [[vesicular monoamine transporter]]s, neurofilament proteins, and other morphological changes appear to indicate a long term damage of dopamine neurons. All these effects contribute a rise in tolerance thus requiring a larger dosage to achieve the same effect (Lowinson et al. 2004). On the other hand, a study by D'Haenen et al. (2002) suggests cocaine abusers do not show normal age-related loss of [[striatum|striatal]] [[dopamine transporter]] (DAT) sites, suggesting cocaine has neuroprotective properties for dopamine neurons.
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Cocaine can often cause reduced food intake, many chronic users lose their appetite and can experience severe malnutrition and significant weight loss.
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The lack of normal amounts of serotonin and dopamine in the brain is the cause of the dysphoria and depression felt after the initial high.
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Cocaine is extensively [[metabolism|metabolized]], primarily in the [[liver]], with only about 1% excreted unchanged in the urine. The metabolism is dominated by [[hydrolysis|hydrolytic]] [[ester]] cleavage, so the eliminated metabolites consist mostly of [[benzoylecgonine]] (BE), the major [[metabolite]], and other significant metabolites in lesser amounts such as ecgonine methyl ester (EME) and [[ecgonine]]. Further minor metabolites of cocaine include [[norcocaine]], p-hydroxycocaine, m-hydroxycocaine, p-hydroxybenzoylecgonine (pOHBE), and m-hydroxybenzoylecgonine (Kolbrich et al. 2006).
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Cocaine has been held responsible for more visits to US emergency rooms than any other illegal drug (WebMD 2013a). The amount of sudden-deaths from cocaine also is not a rare phenomenon and in one study the cause of cocaine-related sudden death was found to cardiovascular in 62% of the cases, cerebrovascular in 14%, excited delirium in 14%, respiratory in 5%, and and metabolic in 5% (Nainggolan 2010). Drs. Richard Lange and L David Hillis  of the University of Texas Health Science Center note "The notion that recreational cocaine use is 'safe' should be dispelled, since even small amounts may have catastrophic consequences" (Nainggolan 2010).
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=== Addiction ===
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Cocaine dependence (or '''addiction''') is psychological dependency on the regular use of cocaine. Cocaine dependency may result in physiological damage, lethargy, psychosis, depression, [[akathisia]], and fatal overdose.
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Physical withdrawal is not dangerous. Physiological changes caused by cocaine withdrawal include vivid and unpleasant dreams, insomnia or hypersomnia, increased appetite and psychomotor retardation or agitation (Lowinson et al. 2004).
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===Celebrities who died from cocaine-related causes===
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Among the notable cocaine-related deaths from cocaine have been [[basketball]] player [[Len Bias]], [[baseball]] player Ken Caminiti, Quiet Riot singer Kevin DuBrow, [[The Who]] musician John Entwistle, actor Chris Farley (along with morphine), model Katy French, The Righteous Brothers musician Bobby Hatfield, the Pretenders musician James Honeyman-Scott, Blind Melon singer Shannon Hoon, actress/singer Whitney Houston (drowning under the influence), [[Grateful Dead]] musician Brent Mydland, actor River Phoenix (along with heroin), the Temptations musician David Ruffin, baseball player Rod Scurry, and musician Ike Turner.
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==Mechanism of action==
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[[File:DAT1regulation.jpg|right|thumb|300px|Comparison of the mechanism of cocaine versus that of amphetamines. Cocaine binds directly to the [[Dopamine transporter|DAT1]] transporter, inhibiting reuptake with more efficacy than [[amphetamine]]s, which [[phosphorylation|phosphorylate]] it causing [[Internalization#Biology|internalization]]. Amphetamines, primarily releasing DAT (which cocaine does not do), only inhibite reuptake as a secondary, and much more minor, mode of action than cocaine.]]
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The human brain appears to be hardwired with a reward system that provides pleasure when humans engage in various behaviors that are important to individual or species survival, such as romantic love, sex, and food. Humans ability to feel good involves brain [[neurotransmitter]]s in this reward system, including [[dopamine]] released by [[neuron]]s in areas known as the ventral tegmental area (VTA), the amygdala, and the nucleus accumbens (Marieb and Hoehn 2010; Spanage and Weiss 1999).
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Various drugs of abuse can subvert this reward system, one of which is cocaine. These drugs can cause an addictive pleasure flush by flooding the brain with neurotransmitter-like chemicals or causing a build-up of neurotransmitters such as dopamine. However, this short-lived pleasure also comes with some serious side-effects, including the brain making and releasing less neurotransmitters on its own.
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A major effect of cocaine on the [[central nervous system]] is the blockade of the '''dopamine''' reuptake transporter protein and thus blocking the reabsorption of dopamine. Dopamine [[transmitter]] released during neural signaling is normally recycled via the transporter protein; in other words, the transporter binds the transmitter and pumps it out of the synaptic cleft back into the [[presynaptic]] neuron, where it is taken up into storage [[vesicle (biology)|vesicles]]. By binding tightly with the dopamine transporter, cocaine forms a complex that blocks the transporter's function. The dopamine transporter can no longer perform its reuptake function, and thus [[dopamine]] accumulates in the [[synaptic cleft]]. This results in an enhanced and prolonged postsynaptic effect of [[dopaminergic]] signaling at dopamine receptors on the receiving neuron. In other words, by the dopamine remaining in the synapse, the post-synaptic receptor cells are triggered again and again, allowing a prolonged pleasure flush.
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When the dopamine uptake is blocked by repeated use of cocaine, the system reacts by releasing less and less dopamine and "the reward system effectively goes dry" (Marieb and Hoehn 2010). In other words, prolonged exposure to cocaine leads to homeostatic dysregulation of normal dopaminergic signaling via down-regulation of dopamine receptors and enhanced [[signal transduction]]. The decreased dopaminergic signaling after chronic cocaine use may contribute to depressive mood disorders and sensitize this important brain reward circuit to the reinforcing effects of cocaine (for example, enhanced dopaminergic signaling only when cocaine is self-administered). This sensitization contributes to the intractable nature of addiction and relapse.
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Dopamine-rich brain regions such as the ventral tegmental area, [[nucleus accumbens]], and prefrontal [[Cerebral cortex|cortex]] are frequent targets of cocaine addiction research. Of particular interest is the pathway consisting of dopaminergic neurons originating in the ventral tegmental area that terminate in the nucleus accumbens. This projection may function as a "reward center," in that it seems to show activation in response to drugs of abuse like cocaine in addition to natural rewards like food or sex (Spanage and Weiss 1999). While the precise role of dopamine in the subjective experience of reward is highly controversial among neuroscientists, the release of dopamine in the nucleus accumbens is widely considered to be at least partially responsible for cocaine's rewarding effects. This hypothesis is largely based on laboratory data involving rats that are trained to self-administer cocaine. If dopamine antagonists are infused directly into the nucleus accumbens, well-trained rats self-administering cocaine will initially increase responding only to stop completely, thereby indicating that cocaine is no longer reinforcing (i.e. rewarding) the drug-seeking behavior.  
  
'''Cocaine''' is a [[crystalline]] [[tropane]] [[alkaloid]] that is obtained from the leaves of the [[coca]] plant. It is a [[stimulant]] of the [[central nervous system]] and an [[appetite suppressant]], creating what has been described as a euphoric sense of happiness and increased energy. Though most often used recreationally for this effect, cocaine is also a topical [[anesthesia|anesthetic]] that was used in [[eye surgery|eye]], throat, and nose [[surgery]] in the 19th and early 20th centuries. Cocaine can be psychologically [[addiction|addictive]], and its possession, cultivation, and distribution is illegal for non-medicinal / non-government sanctioned purposes in virtually all parts of the world. The name comes from the name of the ''coca'' plant plus the alkaloid suffix ''-ine''.
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Cocaine also effects '''seratonin''' (5-hydroxytryptamine, 5-HT), a monoamine neurotransmitter widely thought to be a contributor to feelings of well-being and happiness. Cocaine has been shown to inhibit the re-uptake of [[5-HT3 receptor|5-HT3]]. The overabundance of 5-HT3 receptors in cocaine conditioned rats display this trait; however, the exact effect of 5-HT3 in this process is unclear (Carta et al. 2003). The [[5-HT2 receptor]] (particularly the subtypes 5-HT2AR, 5-HT2BR and 5-HT2CR) show influence in the evocation of [[hyperactivity]] displayed in cocaine use (Filip et al. 2004).
  
Cocaine is an illicit drug derived from the leaf of the coca plant, a plant whose stimulating qualities were well-known to the ancient peoples of Peru and other Pre-Columbian South American societies. In Western countries, cocaine has been a feature of the counterculture for well-over a century; there is a long-list of prominent intellectuals, artists, and musicians who have used the drug — names ranging from [[Sir Arthur Conan Doyle]] and [[Sigmund Freud]] to President (and General) [[Ulysses S. Grant]].{{fact}}For many decades cocaine was a key ingredient in [[Coca-Cola]]. Today, although illegal in virtually all countries, cocaine remains popular in a wide-variety of social and personal settings.
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[[Sigma receptor]]s are affected by cocaine, as cocaine functions as a sigma ligand agonist (NIH/NIDA 2003). Sigma receptors are proteins found in the brain (and other parts of the body). The impact of cocaine on these sigma receptions may be part of the reason for cocaine's suppression of the [[immune system]] (NIH/NIDA 2003). Another specific receptor cocaine has been demonstrated to function on is [[NMDA]] (Lluch et al. 2005).
  
==History==
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Cocaine also blocks [[ion channel|sodium channels]], thereby interfering with the propagation of [[action potential]]s; thus, like [[lignocaine]] and [[novocaine]], it acts as a local anesthetic. It also functions on the binding sites to the dopamine and serotonin sodium dependent transport area as targets as separate mechanisms from its reuptake of those transporters; unique to its local anesthetic value, which makes it in a class of functionality different from both its own derived phenyltropanes analogues (which have that removed) and the amphetamine class of stimulants (which as well altogether lack that). In addition to this cocaine has some target binding to the site of the Kappa-opioid receptor as well. Cocaine also causes [[vasoconstriction]], thus reducing bleeding during minor surgical procedures. The locomotor enhancing properties of cocaine may be attributable to its enhancement of dopaminergic transmission from the [[substantia nigra]].  
===The coca leaf===
 
For thousands of years, [[South America]]n [[Native American (Americas)|indigenous peoples]] have chewed the [[coca]] leaf (''Erythroxylum coca''), a plant that contains vital nutrients as well as numerous [[alkaloids]], including cocaine. The leaf was, and is, chewed almost universally by some [[tribe|indigenous communities]]—ancient Peruvian mummies have been found with the remains of coca leaves, and pottery from the time period depicts humans whose cheeks are bulged with the presence of something on which they are chewing.<ref name="mummies">{{cite journal|author=Altman AJ, Albert DM, Fournier GA|title=Cocaine’s use in ophthalmology: our 100-year heritage|journal=Surv Ophthalmol|year=1985|volume=29|pages=300&ndash;307|curly=true}}</ref>However, it should be noted that there is no evidence that its habitual use has ever led to any of the negative consequences generally associated with habitual cocaine use today.<ref>{{cite journal|author=A. Barnett, R. Hawks, and R. Resnick|title=Cocaine Pharmacokinetics in Humans|journal=The Journal of Ethnopharmacology|volume=3|pages=353&ndash;366|year=1981|curly=true}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|author=A. Weil|title=The Therapeutic Value of Coca in Contemporary Medicine|journal=The Journal of Ethnopharmacology|volume=3|pages=367&ndash;376|year=1981|curly=true}}</ref> There is also evidence that these cultures used a mixture of coca leaves and saliva as an anesthetic for the performance of [[trepanation]].<ref name="trepanning">{{cite journal|author=Gay GR, Inaba DS, Sheppard CW and Newmyer JA|title=Cocaine: History, epidemiology, human pharmacology and treatment. A perspective on a new debut for an old girl|journal=Clinical Toxicology|volume=8|pages=149&ndash;178|year=1975|curly=true}}</ref>
 
  
[[Image:Coca.jpg|168px|left|thumb|The coca plant, ''Erythroxylum coca''.]]
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The impact of the neurotransmitter [[glutamate]] is also believed to be important to maintaining addiction, as glutamate signaling seems to cause permanent brain changes that lead to "compulsive drug-seeking behavior elicited by external cues" (Marieb and Hoehn 2010). Mice lacking a particular glutamate receptor are willing to try cocaine but do not become addicted (Marieb and Hoehn 2010). These combined dopamine and glutamate systems are so strong that years later, certain setting can create intense cravings for cocaine (Marieb and Hoehn 2010).
  
When the [[Spanish colonization of the Americas|Spaniards conquered South America]], they at first ignored aboriginal claims that the leaf gave them strength and energy, and declared the practice of chewing it the work of the [[Satan|Devil]]. But after discovering that these claims were true, they legalized and taxed the leaf, taking 10 percent off the value of each crop. These taxes were for a time the main source of support for the [[Roman Catholic Church]] in the region. In 1569, Nicholas Monardes described the practice of the natives of chewing a mixture of tobacco and coca leaves to induce "great contentment":
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Because [[nicotine]] increases the levels of dopamine in the brain, many cocaine users find that consumption of [[tobacco]] products during cocaine use enhances the euphoria. This, however, may have undesirable consequences, such as uncontrollable [[chain smoking]] during cocaine use (even users who do not normally smoke [[cigarettes]] have been known to chain smoke when using cocaine), in addition to the detrimental health effects and the additional strain on the cardiovascular system caused by tobacco.
{{cquote|[...when they wished to] make themselves drunk and [...] out of judgment [they chewed a mixture of tobacco and coca leaves which ...] make them go as they were out of their wittes [...]}}<ref name="monardes">{{cite book|title=Joyfull Newes out of the Newe Founde Worlde|first=Nicholas|last=Monardes|coauthors=Translated into English by J. Frampton|publisher=Alfred Knopf|year=1925|location=New York, NY|curly=true}}</ref>
 
  
In 1609, [[Padre]] [[Blas Valera]] wrote:
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==Forms==
{{cquote|Coca protects the body from many ailments, and our doctors use it in powdered form to reduce the swelling of wounds, to strengthen broken bones, to expel cold from the body or prevent it from entering, and to cure rotten wounds or sores that are full of maggots. And if it does so much for outward ailments, will not its singular virtue have even greater effect in the entrails of those who eat it?}}
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[[File:CocaineHydrochloridePowder.jpg|right|thumb|A pile of cocaine hydrochloride]]
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[[File:CocaineHCl.jpg|right|thumb|A piece of compressed cocaine powder]]
  
===Isolation===
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Cocaine in its purest form is a white, pearly product. Cocaine appearing in powder form is a [[salt (chemistry)|salt]], typically cocaine [[hydrochloride]]. Street market cocaine is frequently adulterated or “cut” with various powdery fillers to increase its weight; the substances most commonly used in this process are [[baking soda]]; sugars, such as [[lactose]], [[dextrose]], [[inositol]], and [[mannitol]]; and local anesthetics, such as [[lidocaine]] or [[benzocaine]], which mimic or add to cocaine's numbing effect on mucous membranes. Cocaine may also be "cut" with other stimulants such as [[methamphetamine]]. Adulterated cocaine is often a white, off-white or pinkish powder.
Although the stimulant and hunger-suppressant properties of coca had been known for many centuries, the isolation of the cocaine [[alkaloid]] was not achieved until 1855. Many scientists had attempted to isolate cocaine, but none had been successful for two reasons: the knowledge of chemistry required was insufficient at the time, worsened because coca does not grow in [[Europe]] and ruins easily during travel
 
  
The cocaine alkaloid was first isolated by the [[Germany|German]] [[chemist]] [[Friedrich Gaedcke]] in 1855. Gaedcke named the alkaloid “erythroxyline,and published a description in the journal ''[[Archives de Pharmacie]].''
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'''Salts'''. Cocaine is a weakly alkaline compound (an "alkaloid") and can therefore combine with acidic compounds to form various salts. The hydrochloride (HCl) salt of cocaine is by far the most commonly encountered, although the sulfate (-SO<sub>4</sub>) and the nitrate (-NO<sub>3</sub>) are occasionally seen. Different salts dissolve to a greater or lesser extent in various solvents. The hydrochloride salt is polar in character and is quite soluble in water. Powdered cocaine is commonly known as "coke" or "blow" and users can snort the powder (inhale through the nose) and into the bloodstream, or dissolve in water and inject directly into the bloodstream.
  
In 1856, [[Friedrich Wöhler]] asked Dr. [[Carl Scherzer]], a scientist aboard the ''[[Novara]]'' (an [[Austria]]n [[frigate]] sent by Emperor [[Franz Joseph of Austria|Franz Joseph]] to circle the globe), to bring him a large amount of coca leaves from South America. In 1859, the ship finished its travels and Wöhler received a trunk full of coca. Wöhler passed on the leaves to [[Albert Niemann]], a [[Doctor of Philosophy|Ph.D.]] student at the [[University of Göttingen]] in [[Germany]], who then developed an improved purification process.
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'''Basic'''. As the name implies, “freebase” or "free base" is the [[base (chemistry)|base]] form of cocaine, as opposed to the [[salt (chemistry)|salt]] form. It is practically insoluble in water whereas hydrochloride salt is water soluble. (Most alkaloids are unstable in their pure form and exist in ionic salt form. The salts usually exhibit greater water solubility. Common counterions include chloride, bromide, acetate and oxalate. Because of the ubiquity of chloride salts, formed from the reaction of the amine with hydrochloric acid, these amine derivatives are known as the hydrochlorides.) Pure cocaine is prepared by neutralizing its compounding salt with an alkaline solution, which will precipitate to non-polar basic cocaine. It is further refined through aqueous-solvent [[Liquid-liquid extraction]].
  
Niemann described every step he took to isolate cocaine in his [[dissertation]] titled ''[[On a New Organic Base in the Coca Leaves|Über eine neue organische Base in den Cocablättern]]'' (''On a New Organic Base in the Coca Leaves''), which was published in 1860&mdash;it earned him his Ph.D. and is now in the [[British Library]]. He wrote of the alkaloid's “colourless transparent prisms” and said that, “Its solutions have an alkaline reaction, a bitter taste, promote the flow of saliva and leave a peculiar numbness, followed by a sense of cold when applied to the tongue.” Niemann named the alkaloid “cocaine”—as with other [[alkaloid]]s its name carried the “-ine” [[Affix|suffix]] (from [[Latin]] ''-ina'').
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The term "freebasing" means converting an ionic form into free base. It can refer to deprotonating the hydrochloride salt form of cocaine to free base form. The free base is preferred for smoking. Smoking freebase cocaine has the additional effect of releasing [[methylecgonidine]] into the user's system due to the [[pyrolysis]] of the substance (a side effect which insufflating or injecting powder cocaine does not create). Some research suggests that smoking freebase cocaine can be even more cardiotoxic than other [[routes of administration]] (Scheidweiler et al. 2003; Yang et al. 2001; Fandiño et al. 2002).
  
===Medicalization===
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[[File:Smoking Crack.jpg|thumb|A woman smoking crack cocaine]]
<!yes, this is a word, go look it up in the OED ;)—>
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'''Crack cocaine'''. Crack is a lower purity form of free-base cocaine that is usually produced by neutralization of cocaine hydrochloride with a solution of baking soda (sodium bicarbonate, NaHCO<sub>3</sub>) and water, producing a very hard/brittle, off-white-to-brown colored, amorphous material that contains sodium carbonate, entrapped water, and other by-products as the main impurities. The color of [[crack cocaine|“crack” cocaine]] depends upon several factors including the origin of the cocaine used, the method of preparation&mdash;with [[ammonia]] or [[baking soda]]&mdash;and the presence of impurities, but will generally range from white to a yellowish cream to a light brown. Its texture will also depend on the adulterants, origin and processing of the powdered cocaine, and the method of converting the base. It ranges from a crumbly texture, sometimes extremely oily, to a hard, almost crystalline nature.
With the discovery of this new alkaloid, Western medicine was quick to jump upon and exploit the possible uses of this plant.
 
  
In 1879, [[Vassili von Anrep]], of the [[University of Würzburg]], devised an experiment to demonstrate the analgesic properties of the newly-discovered alkaloid. He prepared two separate jars, one containing a cocaine-salt solution, with the other containing merely salt water. He then submerged a frog's legs into the two jars, one leg in the treatment and one in the control solution, and proceeded to stimulate the legs in several different ways. The leg that had been immersed in the cocaine solution reacted very differently than the leg that had been immersed in salt water.<ref name="anrep_frog">{{cite journal|author=Yentis SM, Vlassakov KV|title=Vassily von Anrep, forgotten pioneer of regional anesthesia|journal=Anesthesiology|year=1999|volume=90|pages=890&ndash;895|curly=true}}</ref>
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The "freebase" and "crack" forms of cocaine are usually administered by vaporization of the powdered substance into smoke, which is then inhaled. The origin of the name "crack" comes from the "crackling" sound (and hence the [[onomatopoeic]] moniker “crack”) that is produced when the cocaine and its impurities (i.e. water, sodium bicarbonate) are heated past the point of vaporization (Nelson 1998). Pure cocaine base/crack can be smoked because it vaporizes smoothly, with little or no decomposition at {{convert|98|°C|0|abbr=on}} (Miller et al. 2009), which is below the boiling point of water. In contrast, cocaine hydrochloride does not vaporize until heated to a much higher temperature (about 197°C), and considerable decomposition/burning occurs at these high temperatures. This effectively destroys some of the cocaine, and yields a sharp, acrid, and foul-tasting smoke.
  
[[Carl Koller]] (a close associate of [[Sigmund Freud]], who would write about cocaine later) experimented with cocaine for [[ophthalmic]] usage. In an infamous experiment in 1884, he experimented upon himself by applying a cocaine solution to his own eye and then pricking it with pins. His findings were presented to the [[Heidelberg Ophthalmological Society]]. Also in 1884, Jellinek demonstrated the effects of cocaine as a [[respiratory system]] anesthetic. In 1885, Halsted demonstrated nerve-block anesthesia, and Corning demonstrated [[peridural]] anesthesia. 1898 saw Quincke use cocaine for [[spinal]] anesthesia.
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'''Unprocessed coca leaf'''. Coca leaves have been used unprocessed for thousands of years in South America for various [[religion|religious]], social, [[medicine|medicinal]], and [[nutrition|nutritional]] purposes, including to control hunger and combat the impacts of high altitudes. Chewing of unadulterated coca leaves has been a tradition in the Andes for thousands of years and remains practiced by millions in South America today (Cortes 2013). Individuals may suck on wads of the leaves and keep them in their cheeks for hours at a time, often combining with chalk or ask to help dissolve the alkaloids into the saliva (Boucher 1991). Unprocessed coca leaves are also commonly used in the Andean countries to make a [[herbal tea]] with mild [[stimulant]] effects. However, since the alkaloid cocaine is present in only trace amounts in the leaves, it does not cause the euphoric and psychoactive effects associated with use of the drug.  (See the article [[coca]].)
  
===Popularization===
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==Routes of administration==
In 1859, an [[Italy|Italian]] [[physician|doctor]] [[Paolo Mantegazza]] returned from [[Peru]], where he had witnessed first-hand the use of coca by the natives. He proceeded to experiment on himself and upon his return to [[Milan]] he wrote a paper in which he described the effects. In this paper he declared coca and cocaine (at the time they were assumed to be the same) as being useful medicinally, in the treatment of “a furred tongue in the morning, [[flatulence]], [and] whitening of the teeth.
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Cocaine powder can be inhaled through the nose or dissolved in water and injected into the bloodstream, as well as rubbed along the gum line. The freebase form can be smoked. Cocaine can also be applied to the skin as an topical anesthetic. Coca leaf can be chewed and brewed into a tea. Injecting and smoking leads to faster absorption into the bloodstream than snorting and a quicker, stronger high, but faster absorption also tends to mean a shorter duration of the high (5-10 minutes for smoking versus 15-30 minutes for snorting)(Botany Central 2013).
  
[[Image:Mariani_pope.jpg|320px|right|thumb|[[Pope Leo XIII]] purportedly carried a hipflask of Vin Mariani with him, and awarded a [[Vatican City|Vatican]] [[gold medal]] to [[Angelo Mariani]].]]
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[[File:Man sniffing.jpg|thumb|upright|A man sniffing cocaine]]
A chemist named [[Angelo Mariani]] who read Mantegazza’s paper became immediately intrigued with coca and its economic potential. In 1863, Mariani started marketing a [[wine]] called [[Vin Mariani]], which had been treated with coca leaves. The [[alcohol|ethanol]] in wine acted as a solvent and extracted the cocaine from the coca leaves, altering the drink’s effect. It contained 6&nbsp;mg cocaine per ounce of wine, but Vin Mariani, which was to be exported, contained 7.2&nbsp;mg per ounce to compete with the higher cocaine content of similar drinks in the United States. A “pinch of coca leaves” was included in John Styth Pemberton's original 1886 recipe for [[Coca-Cola]], though the company began using decocainized leaves in 1906 when the [[Pure Food and Drug Act]] was passed. The only known measure of the amount of cocaine in Coca-Cola was determined in 1902 as being as little as 1/400 of a [[grain (measure)|grain]] (0.2&nbsp;mg) per ounce of syrup (6&nbsp;[[parts per million|ppm]]){{citation needed}}. The actual amount of cocaine that Coca-Cola contained during the first twenty years of its production is practically impossible to determine.
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'''Insufflation''' ("snorting," "sniffing," or "blowing") involves breathing in the powder through the nose and in that manner absorption into the bloodstream. Prior to insufflation, cocaine powder is divided into very fine particles. Rolled up [[currency|banknotes]], hollowed-out [[pen]]s, cut [[drinking straw|straws]], and other such items are often used to insufflate cocaine. Upon snorting, the drug coats and is absorbed through the [[mucous membrane]]s lining the [[Paranasal sinus|sinuses]]. Any material not directly absorbed through the mucous membranes is collected in [[mucus]] and swallowed. When insufflating cocaine, absorption through the nasal membranes is approximately 30–60%, with higher doses leading to increased absorption efficiency.
  
In 1879 cocaine began to be used to treat [[morphine]] addiction. Cocaine was introduced into clinical use as a [[local anaesthetic]] in Germany in 1884, about the same time as [[Sigmund Freud]] published his work ''[[Über Coca]]'', in which he wrote that cocaine causes:
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Nasal insufflation is the most common method of ingestion of recreational powdered cocaine in the Western world. In a study of cocaine users, the average time taken to reach peak subjective effects was 14.6&nbsp;minutes (Volkow et al. 2000). Physiological and psychotropic effects from nasally insufflated cocaine are sustained for approximately 40–60&nbsp;minutes after the peak effects are attained (Barnett et al. 1981). Snorting involves slower absorption into the bloodstream; however, as with other means of administration sudden death remains a risk, as with the other medical complications, including potential damage to the inside of the nose due to cocaine highly constricting blood vessels and therefore blood and oxygen/nutrient flow to that area. In addition, a study by Bonkovsky and Mehta (2001) reported that, just like shared needles, the sharing of straws used to "snort" cocaine can spread blood diseases such as [[hepatitis C]].  
{{cquote|...exhilaration and lasting euphoria, which in no way differs from the normal euphoria of the healthy person...You perceive an increase of self-control and possess more vitality and capacity for work....In other words, you are simply normal, and it is soon hard to believe you are under the influence of any drug....Long intensive physical work is performed without any fatigue...This result is enjoyed without any of the unpleasant after-effects that follow exhilaration brought about by alcohol....Absolutely no craving for the further use of cocaine appears after the first, or even after repeated taking of the drug...}}
 
  
[[Image:Cocaine tooth drops.jpg|thumb|320px|left|Cocaine, the fast-acting anesthetic.]]In 1885 the U.S. manufacturer [[Parke-Davis]] sold cocaine in various forms, including cigarettes, powder, and even a cocaine mixture that could be injected directly into the user’s veins with the included needle. The company promised that its cocaine products would “supply the place of food, make the coward brave, the silent eloquent and ... render the sufferer insensitive to pain.”
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'''Injection'''. Injection, involving administering the drug directly to the bloodstream by the use of needles, provides the highest blood levels of drug in the shortest amount of time. Volkow et al. (2000) found that the average time taken to reach peak subjective effects was 3.1&nbsp;minutes. The euphoria passes quickly. Aside from the toxic effects of cocaine, there is also danger of circulatory [[embolism|emboli]] from the insoluble substances that may be used to cut the drug. Subjective effects not commonly shared with other methods of administration include a ringing in the ears moments after injection (usually when in excess of 120 milligrams) lasting 2 to 5&nbsp;minutes, including [[tinnitus]] & audio distortion.  As with all injected illicit substances, there is a risk of the user contracting blood-borne infections if sterile injecting equipment is not available or used. Additionally, because cocaine is a vasoconstrictor, and usage often entails multiple injections within several hours or less, subsequent injections are progressively more difficult to administer, which in turn may lead to more injection attempts and more sequelae from improperly performed injection. An injected mixture of cocaine and [[heroin]], known as “[[speedball (drug)|speedball]],” is a particularly dangerous combination, as the converse effects of the drugs actually complement each other, but may also mask the symptoms of an overdose. It has been responsible for numerous deaths, including celebrities such as [[John Belushi]], [[Chris Farley]], [[Mitch Hedberg]], [[River Phoenix]] and [[Layne Staley]].
  
By the late [[Victorian era]] cocaine use had appeared as a vice in [[literature]], for example as the ''cucaine'' injected by [[Arthur Conan Doyle]]’s fictional [[Sherlock Holmes]].
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[[File:Crack Crack.JPG|thumb|A spoon containing baking soda, cocaine, and a small amount of water. Used in a "poor-man's" crack-cocaine production]]
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'''Inhalation'''. Inhalation or smoking involves inhaling cocaine vapor into the lungs by sublimating solid cocaine by heating. Smoking freebase or crack cocaine is most often accomplished using a pipe made from a small glass tube, often taken from "[[love rose]]s," small glass tubes with a paper rose that are promoted as romantic gifts (Reist 2005). A small piece of clean heavy copper or occasionally stainless steel scouring pad may serve as a reduction base and flow modulator in which the "rock" can be melted and boiled to vapor. Crack often is smoked by placing it at the end of the pipe; a flame held close to it produces vapor, which is then inhaled by the smoker. Powdered cocaine is also sometimes smoked, though heat destroys much of the chemical. Smoking or vaporizing cocaine and inhaling it into the lungs produces an almost immediate "high" that can be very intense quite rapidly. In a Brookhaven National Laboratory medical department study, based on self reports of cocaine abusers who participated in the study, "peak high" was found at mean of 1.4min +/- 0.5&nbsp;minutes (Volkow et al. 2000). While the stimulating effects may last for hours, the euphoric sensation is very brief&mdash;usually 5 to 15 minutes&mdash;prompting the user to smoke more immediately.  
  
In 1909, [[Ernest Shackleton]] took “Forced March” brand cocaine tablets to [[Antarctica]], as did [[Captain Scott]] a year later on his ill-fated journey to the [[South Pole]].<ref name="dominic_streatfeild">{{cite book | first=Dominic | last=Streatfeild | title=Cocaine: An Unauthorized Biography | publisher=Picador | year=2003  | id=ISBN 0312422261|curly=true}}</ref> Even as late as 1938, the ''[[Larousse Gastronomique]]'' was published carrying a recipe for “cocaine pudding”.
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'''Application to skin'''. Many users rub the powder along the gum line, or onto a cigarette filter, which is then smoked, numbing the gums and teeth&mdash;hence, the colloquial names of "numbies", "gummers" or "cocoa puffs" for this type of administration. This is mostly done with the small amounts of cocaine remaining on a surface after insufflation. A medical form of cocaine, strictly regulated and available by prescription, is applied to the skin to numb eye, nose, and throat pain (WebMD 2013b).
  
===Prohibition===
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'''Oral: Coca leaf chewing and infusions (tea)'''. Unadulterated [[coca]] leaves have been chewed for thousands of years in the Andes and remains practiced by millions in South America today (Cortes 2013). Individuals may suck on wads of the leaves and keep them in their cheeks for hours at a time. Coca leaves are typically mixed with an alkaline substance (such as [[Calcium hydroxide|lime]]) to help dissolve the alkaloids into the saliva and chewed into a wad that is retained in the mouth between gum and cheek (much in the same as [[chewing tobacco]] is chewed) and sucked of its juices. The juices are absorbed slowly by the mucous membrane of the inner cheek and by the gastrointestinal tract when swallowed. While the cocaine in the plant has little effect on the unbroken skin, it does act on the mucous membranes of the mouth (as well as the membranes of the eye, nose, and stomach) (Royal Botanic Gardens 1985).  However, since the alkaloid cocaine is only in trace amounts in the leaves, it does not cause the euphoric and psychoactive effects associated with use of the concentrated drug. Concentrations vary by variety and region, but leaves have been reported variously as between 0.25% and 0.77% (Plowman and Rivier 1983), between 0.35% and 0.72% by dry weight (Nathanson et al. 1993), and between 0.3% and 1.5% and averaging 0.8% in fresh leaves (Casale and Klein 1993).
By the turn of the twentieth century, the addictive properties of cocaine had become clear to many, and the problem of cocaine abuse began to capture public attention in the United States. The dangers of cocaine abuse became part of a [[moral panic]] that was tied to the dominant racial and social anxieties of the day. In 1903, the ''[[American Journal of Pharmacy]]'' stressed that most cocaine abusers were “[[Bohemianism|bohemians]], gamblers, high- and low-class [[prostitutes]], night porters, bell boys, burglars, racketeers, pimps, and casual laborers.” In 1914, Dr. Christopher Koch of [[Pennsylvania]]’s State Pharmacy Board made the racial innuendo explicit, testifying that, “Most of the attacks upon the white women of the South are the direct result of a cocaine-crazed Negro brain.” Mass media manufactured an epidemic of cocaine use among [[African Americans]] in the [[Southern United States]] to play upon racial prejudices of the era, though there is little evidence that such an epidemic actually took place. In the same year, the [[Harrison Narcotics Tax Act]] outlawed the use of cocaine in the United States. This law incorrectly referred to cocaine as a [[narcotic]], and the misclassification passed into popular culture. As stated above, cocaine is a stimulant, not a narcotic.
 
  
===Modern usage===
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Coca leaves also can be boiled to provide a tea. Although coca leaf chewing is common mainly among the indigenous populations, the consumption of coca tea (''[[Mate de coca]]'') is common among all sectors of society in the Andean countries.  
In many countries, cocaine is a popular [[recreational drug]]. In the [[United States]], the development of "[[Cocaine#Crack cocaine|crack]]" cocaine introduced the substance to a generally poorer inner-city market. Use of the powder form has stayed relatively constant, experiencing a new height of use during the late 1990s and early 2000s in the [[U.S.]], and has become much more popular in the last few years in the [[United Kingdom|UK]].
 
  
Cocaine use is prevalent across all socioeconomic strata, including age, demographics, economic, social, political, religious, and livelihood. Cocaine in its various forms comes in second only to [[cannabis (drug)|cannabis]] as the most popular illegal recreational drug in the [[United States]], and is number one in street value sold each year.{{citeneeded}}
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Because cocaine is hydrolyzed and rendered inactive in the acidic stomach, it is not readily absorbed when ingested alone. Only when mixed with a highly alkaline substance (such as lime) can it be absorbed into the bloodstream through the stomach. The efficiency of absorption of orally administered cocaine is limited by two additional factors. First, the drug is partly catabolized by the liver. Second, capillaries in the mouth and esophagus constrict after contact with the drug, reducing the surface area over which the drug can be absorbed. Nevertheless, cocaine metabolites can be detected in the urine of subjects that have sipped even one cup of coca leaf infusion. Therefore, this is an actual additional form of administration of cocaine, albeit an inefficient one.
  
The estimated U.S. cocaine market exceeded [[United States dollar|$]]35 billion in street value for the year 2003, exceeding revenues by corporations such as [[AT&T]] and [[Starbucks]]{{citeneeded}}. There is a tremendous demand for cocaine in the U.S. market, particularly among those who are making incomes affording [[luxury]] spending, such as single adults and various professionals. Cocaine’s status as a [[club drug]] shows its immense popularity among the “party crowd. Cocaine’s high revenues may be due to the drug’s psychologically addictive nature, which makes the cessation of use very difficult.
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'''Other methods'''. An oral method for the psychoactive drug is to wrap up some cocaine in rolling paper and swallow ([[Parachute (drugs)|parachute]]) it. Little research has been focused on another method: the [[suppository]] (anal or vaginal insertion) method of administration, also known as "plugging." This method of administration is commonly administered using an [[oral syringe]]. Cocaine can be dissolved in water and withdrawn into an oral syringe which may then be lubricated and inserted into the anus or vagina before the plunger is pushedThe rectum and the vaginal canal is where the majority of the drug would likely be taken up, through the membranes lining its walls.
  
In 1995 the [[World Health Organization]] (WHO) and the [[United Nations Interregional Crime and Justice Research Institute]] (UNICRI) announced in a press release the publication of the results of the largest global study on cocaine use ever undertaken. However, a decision in the [[World Health Assembly]] banned the publication of the study. In the sixth meeting of the B committee the US representative threatened that "If [[World Health Organization|WHO]] activities relating to drugs failed to reinforce proven drug control approaches, funds for the relevant programmes should be curtailed". This led to the decision to discontinue publication. A part of the study has been recuperated<ref>{{cite web | title=WHO Cocaine Project |date=1995|author=WHO/UNICRI|url=http://www.tni.org/drugscoca-docs/coca.htm}}</ref>. Available are profiles of cocaine use in 20 countries.
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==Uses==
  
==Pharmacology==
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===Recreational psychoactive drug===
===Appearance===
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[[File:Marion Barry smoking crack.gif|thumb|right|Washington, D.C. Mayor [[Marion Barry]] captured on a surveillance camera smoking crack cocaine during a sting operation by the [[FBI]] and [[D.C. Police]].]]
<!-- Unsourced image removed: [[Image:Cocaine3.jpg|166px|right|thumb|Cocaine powder.]] —>
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Cocaine is best known worldwide for its illegal use as a recreational psychoactive drug. As noted above, this concentrated form of cocaine particularly is used ''nasally'' (nasal insufflation is also known as "snorting," "sniffing," or "blowing"), ''injected'', or ''smoked''. In the United States, the development of [[crack cocaine|"crack" cocaine]] introduced the substance to a generally poorer inner-city market.
Cocaine in its purest form is a white, pearly product. Cocaine appearing in powder form is a [[salt]], typically cocaine [[hydrochloride]] ([[CAS registry number|CAS]] 53-21-4). Black market cocaine is frequently adulterated or “cut” with various powdery fillers to increase its surface area; the substances most commonly used in this process are [[baking soda]]; sugars, such as [[lactose]], [[dextrose]], [[inositol]], and [[mannitol]]; and local anesthetics, such as [[lidocaine]] or [[benzocaine]], which mimic or add to cocaine's numbing effect on mucous membranes. Cocaine may also be "cut" with other stimulants such as methamphetamine. Adulterated cocaine is often a white, off-white or pinkish powder.  
 
  
The color of “crack” cocaine depends upon several factors including the origin of the cocaine used, the method of preparation – with [[ammonia]] or [[sodium bicarbonate]] – and the presence of impurities, but will generally range from a light brown to a pale brown. Its texture will also depend on the factors that affect color, but will range from a crumbly texture, which is usually the lighter variety, to a hard, almost crystalline nature, which is usually the darker variety.
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The United Nations Office of Drugs and Crime estimated that in 2009, the US cocaine market was $37 billion (and shrinking over the past ten years) and the West and Central European Cocaine market was US$ 33 billion (and increasing over the past ten years) (USODC 2011). According to a 2007 United Nations report, Spain is the country with the highest rate of cocaine usage (3.0% of adults in the previous year) (UNODC 2007). Other countries where the usage rate meets or exceeds 1.5% are the United States (2.8%), England and Wales (2.4%), Canada (2.3%), Italy (2.1%), Bolivia (1.9%), Chile (1.8%), and Scotland (1.5%) (UNODC 2007).
  
===Forms of cocaine===
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The production, distribution and sale of cocaine products is restricted and/or illegal in most countries. Internationally, it is regulated by the Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs, and the United Nations Convention Against Illicit Traffic in Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances. In the United States, the manufacture, importation, possession, and distribution of cocaine is additionally regulated by the 1970 Controlled Substances Act. Cocaine is generally treated as a 'hard drug', with severe penalties for possession and trafficking.
====Cocaine sulfate====
 
Cocaine sulfate is produced by [[Maceration|macerating]] coca leaves along with [[water]] that has been acidulated with [[sulfuric acid]], or a naphtha-based solvent, like [[kerosene]] or [[benzene]]. This is often accomplished by putting the ingredients into a vat and stamping on it, in a manner similar to the traditional method for crushing [[grape]]s. After the cocaine is extracted, the water is evaporated to yield a pasty mass of impure cocaine sulfate.
 
  
The sulfate itself is an intermediate step to producing cocaine hydrochloride. In [[South America]], it is commonly smoked along with tobacco, and is known as ''pasta,'' ''basuco,'' ''basa,'' ''pitillo,'' ''paco'' or simply ''paste.'' It is also gaining popularity as a cheap drug (.30-.70 U.S. cents per "hit" or dose) in [[Argentina]].
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===Medicine===
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[[File:Cocaine for kids.gif|thumb|"Cocaine toothache drops", 1885 advertisement of cocaine for [[toothache|dental pain]] in children]]
  
====Freebase====
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Strictly regulated, cocaine can be applied externally to the skin to numb pain. Cocaine was historically used as a topical anesthetic in eye and nasal surgery. It is now predominantly used for nasal and [[lacrimal duct]] surgery. The major disadvantages of this use are cocaine's intense [[vasoconstrictor]] activity and potential for [[cardiovascular]] toxicity. Cocaine has since been largely replaced in Western medicine by synthetic local anesthetics such as [[benzocaine]], [[proparacaine]], [[lignocaine]]/[[xylocaine]]/[[lidocaine]], and [[tetracaine]] though it remains available for use if specified. If vasoconstriction is desired for a procedure (as it reduces bleeding), the anesthetic is combined with a vasoconstrictor such as [[phenylephrine]] or [[epinephrine]].  
{{main|Freebase}}
 
As the name implies, “freebase” is the [[Base (chemistry)|base]] form of cocaine, as opposed to the [[salt]] form of cocaine hydrochloride. Whereas cocaine hydrochloride is extremely [[soluble]] in [[water]], cocaine base is insoluble in water and is therefore not suitable for drinking, snorting or injecting. Cocaine hydrochloride is not well-suited for smoking because the [[temperature]] at which it [[evaporation|vaporizes]] is very high, and close to the temperature at which it [[combustion|burns]]; however, cocaine base [[evaporation|vaporizes]] at a low temperature, which makes it suitable for inhalation.
 
  
Smoking freebase is preferred by many users because the cocaine is absorbed immediately into [[blood]] via the [[lungs]], where it reaches the [[brain]] in about five seconds. The rush is much more intense than sniffing the same amount of cocaine nasally, but the effects do not last as long. The peak of the freebase rush is over almost as soon as the user exhales the vapor, but the high typically lasts 5–10 minutes afterward. What makes freebasing particularly dangerous is that users typically don't wait that long for their next hit and will continue to smoke freebase until none is left. These effects are similar to those that can be achieved by injecting or “slamming” cocaine hydrochloride, but without the risks associated with [[intravenous]] drug use (though there are other serious risks associated with smoking freebase).
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In Australia, cocaine is currently prescribed for use as a local anesthetic for conditions such as mouth and lung ulcers. Some [[otolaryngology|ENT]] specialists occasionally use cocaine within the practice when performing procedures such as nasal [[cauterization]]. In this scenario dissolved cocaine is soaked into a ball of cotton wool, which is placed in the nostril for the 10–15&nbsp;minutes immediately prior to the procedure, thus performing the dual role of both numbing the area to be cauterized, and vasoconstriction. Even when used this way, some of the used cocaine may be absorbed through oral or nasal mucosa and give systemic effects.
  
Freebase cocaine is produced by first dissolving cocaine hydrochloride in water. Once dissolved in water, cocaine hydrochloride (Coc HCl) dissociates into protonated cocaine [[ion]] (Coc-H<sup><small>+</small></sup>) and [[chloride]] ion (Cl<sup><small>–</small></sup>). Any [[solid]]s that remain in the [[solution]] are not cocaine (they are part of the cut) and are removed by [[Filter (chemistry)|filtering]]. A base, typically [[ammonia]] (NH<sub><small>3</small></sub>), is added to the [[solution]]. The following net [[chemical reaction]] takes place:
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In the United States, cocaine remains an FDA-approved Schedule C-II drug, which can be prescribed by a healthcare provider, but is strictly regulated. A form of cocaine available by prescription is applied to the skin to numb eye, nose, and throat pain and narrow blood vessels (WebMD 2013b).
  
<div align="center" style="line-height: 2em;">Coc-H<sup><small>+</small><sup>Cl<sup><small>–</small><sup> + NH<sub><small>3</small></sub>  → Coc + NH<sub><small>4</small></sub>Cl</div>
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Unprocessed coca leaf traditionally has been used for a variety of medical purposes, including as a stimulant to overcome fatigue, hunger, and thirst. Because coca constricts blood vessels, it also serves to oppose bleeding, and coca seeds were used for [[nosebleed]]s. Coca leaf also has been used to overcome altitude sickness, and in the Andes tourists have been offered coca tea for this purpose (Cortes 2013). In addition, coca extracts have been used as a muscle and cerebral stimulant to alleviate nausea, vomiting, and stomach pains without upsetting digestion (Botany Central 2013; WebMD 2013b). (See the article [[coca]] for these and other uses of the coca leaf.)
  
As freebase cocaine (Coc) is insoluble in water, it [[Precipitation (chemistry)|precipitates]] and the solution becomes cloudy. To recover the freebase, a [[lipophil]]ic solvent like [[diethyl ether]] is added to the solution: Because freebase is highly soluble in ether, a vigorous shaking of the mixture results in the freebase being dissolved in the ether. As [[ether]] is insoluble in water, it can be [[siphon]]ed off. The ether is then left to evaporate, leaving behind the pured cocaine base.
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In the United States, a [[Stepan Company]] plant in [[Maywood, New Jersey]] manufactures pure cocaine for medical use and also produces a cocaine-free extract of the coca leaf, which is used as a flavoring ingredient in Coca-Cola. Other companies have registrations with the DEA to import coca leaf according to 2011 Federal Register Notices for Importers (ODC 2011), including Johnson Matthey, Inc, Pharmaceutical Materials; Mallinckrodt Inc; Penick Corporation; and the Research Triangle Institute.
  
Handling with diethyl ether is dangerous because ether is extremely [[flammable]], its vapors are heavier than air and can “creep” from an open bottle, and in the presence of oxygen it can form [[diethyl ether peroxide|peroxide]]s, which can spontaneously combust. Demonstrative of the dangers of the practice, the famous comedian [[Richard Pryor]] used to perform a well known skit in which he poked fun at himself over a 1980 incident in which he caused an explosion and set himself on fire while attempting to smoke “freebase”, presumably while still wet with ether.
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== History ==
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[[File:Folha de coca.jpg|thumb|240px|[[Coca leaf]] in [[Bolivia]]]]
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[[Coca]], the plant in which cocaine is found, has been utilized in unprocessed form for thousands of years. There is [[archaeology|archeological]] evidence that suggests the use of coca leaves 8000 years ago, with the finding of coca leaves of that date (6000 B.C.E.) in floors in [[Peru]], along with pieces of calcite (calcium carbonate), which is used by those chewing leaves to bring out the alkaloids by helping dissolve them into the saliva (Dillehay et al. 2010; Boucher 1991). Coca leaves also have been found in the Huaca Prieta settlement in northern Peru, dated from about 2500 to 1800 B.C.E. (Botany Central 2013; Hurtado 1995). Traces of cocaine also have been in 3000-year-old mummies of the Alto Ramirez culture of Northern Chile, suggesting coca-leaf chewing dates to at least 1500 B.C.E. (Rivera et al. 2005). The remains of coca leaves not only have been found with ancient Peruvian mummies, but pottery from the time period depicts humans with bulged cheeks, indicating the presence of something on which they are chewing (Altman et al. 1985). It is the view of Boucher (1991) that the coca plant was domesticated by 1500 B.C.E. (See [[coca]] for more detail on the history of coca.)
  
====Crack cocaine====
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The cocaine alkaloid was first isolated by the German [[chemist]] [[Friedrich Gaedcke]] in 1855. Gaedcke named the alkaloid "erythroxyline" and published a description in the journal ''Archiv der Pharmazie'' (Gaedcke 1855).  
[[Image:Crack street dosage.jpg|thumb|right|A pile of crack cocaine ‘rocks’.]]
 
Due to the dangers of using ether to produce pure freebase cocaine, cocaine producers began to omit the step of removing the freebase cocaine precipitate from the ammonia mixture. Typically, filtration processes are also omitted. The end result of this process is that the cut, in addition to the ammonium salt (NH<sub><small>4</small></sub>Cl), remains in the freebase cocaine after the mixture is evaporated. The “rock” that is thus formed also contains a small amount of water. When the rock is heated, this water boils, making a crackling sound (hence the onomatopoeic “crack”). [[Baking soda]] is now most often used as a base rather than ammonia for reasons of lowered stench and toxicity; however, any weak base can be used to make crack cocaine. Strong bases, such as sodium hydroxide, tend to [[hydrolyze]] some of the cocaine into non-psychoactive [[ecgonine]].
 
  
The net reaction when using baking soda (also called sodium bicarbonate, with a chemical formula of NaHCO<sub><small>3</small></sub>) is:
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Cocaine also was isolated in 1859 by [[Albert Niemann (chemist)|Albert Niemann]] of the [[University of Göttingen]], using an improved purification process. Essentially, three years earlier, in 1856, [[Friedrich Wöhler]] asked Dr. [[Carl Scherzer]], a scientist aboard the ''[[SMS Novara|Novara]]'' (an [[Austria]]n [[frigate]] sent by Emperor [[Franz Joseph of Austria|Franz Joseph]] to circle the globe), to bring him a large amount of coca leaves from South America. In 1859, the ship finished its travels and Wöhler received a trunk full of coca. Wöhler passed on the leaves to [[Albert Niemann (chemist)|Albert Niemann]], a [[Doctor of Philosophy|Ph.D.]] student at the [[University of Göttingen]] in Germany, who then developed the improved process (Niemann 1860).
<div align="center" style="line-height: 2em;">Coc-H<sup><small>+</small></sup>Cl<sup><small>–</small></sup> + NaHCO<sub><small>3</small></sub> → Coc + H<sub><small>2</small></sub>O + CO<sub><small>2</small></sub> + NaCl</div>
 
  
Crack is unique because it offers a strong cocaine experience in small, low-priced packages. In the [[United States]], crack cocaine is often sold in small, inexpensive dosage units frequently known as “nickels” or “nickel rocks” (referring to the price of [[United States dollar|$]]5.00), and also “dimes” or “dime rocks” ($10.00) and sometimes as “twenties” or “solids,” and “forties.” The quantity provided by such a purchase varies depending upon many factors, such as local availability, which is affected by geographic location. A twenty may yield a quarter gram or half gram on average, yielding 30 minutes to an hour of effect if hits are taken every few minutes. After the $20 or $40 mark, crack and powder cocaine are sold in grams or fractions of ounces. Many inner-city addicts with a regular dealer will “work a corner,” taking money from anyone who wants crack, making a buy from the dealer, then delivering part of the product while keeping some for themselves.  
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Niemann described every step he took to isolate cocaine in his [[dissertation]] titled ''[[On a New Organic Base in the Coca Leaves|Über eine neue organische Base in den Cocablättern]]'' (''On a New Organic Base in the Coca Leaves''), which was published in 1860&mdash;it earned him his Ph.D. and is now in the [[British Library]]. He wrote of the alkaloid's "colourless transparent prisms" and said that, "Its solutions have an alkaline reaction, a bitter taste, promote the flow of saliva and leave a peculiar numbness, followed by a sense of cold when applied to the tongue."
  
Although consisting of the same active drug as powder cocaine, crack cocaine in the United States is seen as a drug primarily by and for the inner-city poor. While insufflated powder cocaine has an associated glamour attributed to its popularity among mostly middle and upper class whites (as well as [[musician]]s and entertainers), crack is perceived as a [[skid row]] drug of squalor and desperation. The U.S. federal trafficking penalties deal far more harshly towards crack when compared to powdered cocaine. Possession of five grams of crack (or over 500 grams of powder) carries a minimum sentence of five years imprisonment.<ref>{{cite web|author=[[DEA]]|title=Federal Trafficking Penalties|accessdate=2006-05-02|url=http://www.dea.gov/agency/penalties.htm}}</ref>
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It was Niemann who named the alkaloid "cocaine," from "coca" (from [[Quechua languages|Quechua]] "cuca") + [[Affix|suffix]] "ine" (Niemann 1860).  Because of its use as a [[local anesthetic]], a suffix "-caine" was later extracted and used to form names of synthetic [[local anesthetic]]s.
  
Crack cocaine was extremely popular in the mid- and late 1980s, especially in inner cities, though its popularity declined through the 1990s. Due to its popularity, there are many [[List of street names of drugs#Cocaine|different street names for crack cocaine]].
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In 1859, an Italian [[physician|doctor]], [[Paolo Mantegazza]], returned from [[Peru]], where he had witnessed first hand the use of coca by the natives. He proceeded to experiment on himself and upon his return to [[Milan]] he wrote a paper in which he described the effects. In this paper he declared coca and cocaine (at the time they were assumed to be the same) as being useful medicinally, in the treatment of "a furred tongue in the morning, [[flatulence]], and whitening of the teeth."
  
===Modes of administration===
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[[File:Mariani pope.jpg|thumb|[[Pope Leo XIII]], head of the Catholic Church from 1878 to 1903, was purported to carry a hipflask of the Vin Mariani with him and awarded a Vatican gold medal to Mariani.<ref>Vin Mariani Winery, [http://www.cocanaturally.com/ "Experience Vin Mariani Today,"] ''Cocanaturally.com''. Retrieved September 11, 2013.</ref>]]
====Chewed/eaten====
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A chemist named [[Angelo Mariani (chemist)|Angelo Mariani]] who read Mantegazza's paper became immediately intrigued with coca and its economic potential. In 1863, Mariani started marketing a [[wine]] called [[Vin Mariani]], which had been treated with coca leaves, to become [[cocawine]]. The [[alcohol|ethanol]] in wine acted as a solvent and extracted the cocaine from the coca leaves, altering the drink's effect. It contained 6&nbsp;mg cocaine per ounce of wine, but Vin Mariani that was to be exported contained 7.2&nbsp;mg per ounce, to compete with the higher cocaine content of similar drinks in the United States.  
The '''simplest''' way to administer cocaine is to chew on the leaves of the plant. Because of physical restrictions of this modality, only small amounts of cocaine make it into the [[bloodstream]] and the effect is that of a mild stimulant. ''Mate de coca''  or coca-leaf tea is also a traditional method of consumption and is often recommended to treat [[altitude sickness]]. This method of consumption has been practiced for thousands of years by South American natives. One specific purpose of ancient coca leaf consumption was to increase energy and reduce fatigue in messengers who made multi-day quests to other settlements.
 
  
In 1986 an article in the ''[[Journal of the American Medical Association]]'' revealed that health food stores were selling coca-leaf tea as “Health Inca Tea.”
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Coca wine (of which [[Vin Mariani]] was the best-known brand) and other coca-containing preparations were widely sold as patent medicines and tonics, with claims of a wide variety of health benefits. The original version of [[Coca-Cola]] was among these, although the amount in Coca-Cola may have been only trace amounts. Pemberton's original 1886 recipe for Coca-Cola noted a "pinch of coca leaves." By 1891, just five years later, the amount of cocaine was significantly cut, although the ingredient was left in in order to protect the trade name of Coca-Cola. By 1902, it was held that Coca-Cola contained a little as 1/400th of a grain of cocaine per ounce of syrup. In 1929, Coca-Cola became cocaine-free, but before then it was estimated that the amount of cocaine already was no more than one part in 50 million (Mikkelson 2011; Liebowitz 1983; Cortes 2013).
<ref>{{cite journal | author=Siegel RK, Elsohly MA, Plowman T, Rury PM, Jones RT | title=Cocaine in herbal tea | journal=Journal of the American Medical Association | year=January 3, 1986 | volume=255|issue=1| pages=40 | url=http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=pubmed&dopt=Abstract&list_uids=3940302&query_hl=3&itool=pubmed_docsum |curly=true}}</ref> While the packaging claimed it had been “decocainized,” no such process had taken place—they were selling a controlled substance off the shelves. The article stated that drinking two cups of the tea per day gave a mild [[stimulation]], increased [[heart rate]], and [[Emotional mood|mood]] elevation, and the tea was essentially harmless. Despite this, the [[Drug Enforcement Agency|DEA]] seized several shipments in [[Hawaii]], [[Chicago, Illinois]], [[Georgia (U.S. state)|Georgia]], and several locations on the [[East Coast of the United States]], and the product was removed from the shelves.<ref name="dominic_streatfeild"/>
 
  
====Insufflation====
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In 1879, cocaine began to be used to treat [[morphine]] addiction.  
[[Insufflation]] (known colloquially as “snorting," “sniffing," or "blowing") is the most common method of ingestion of recreational powder cocaine in the Western world. Contrary to widespread belief, cocaine is not actually inhaled using this method; rather the drug coats and is absorbed through the [[mucous membrane]]s lining the [[sinus]]es. When insufflating cocaine, absorption through the nasal membranes is approximately 80 percent. Any material not directly absorbed through the mucous membranes is collected in [[mucus]] and swallowed (this "drip" is considered pleasant by some and unpleasant by others). Chronic use results in ongoing [[rhinitis]] and [[necrosis]] of the nasal membranes.  Many users report a burning sensation in the nares (nostrils) after insufflation.  Contrary to common belief, cocaine isn't responsible for much of this burning, as the adulturants used to cut the substance are almost always to blame. Cellulose [[granuloma]]s from adulterants have also been found in the lungs of recreational “sniffers.
 
  
Prior to insufflation, cocaine powder must be divided into very fine particles. Cocaine of high purity breaks into fine dust very easily, except when it's moist (not well stored) and forms “chunks,” which reduce the efficiency of nasal absorption.  
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Also in 1879, Vassili von Anrep, of the [[University of Würzburg]] devised an experiment to demonstrate the analgesic properties of the newly discovered alkaloid. He prepared two separate jars, one containing a cocaine-salt solution and the other containing merely salt water. He then submerged a frog's legs into the two jars, one leg in the treatment and one in the control solution, and proceeded to stimulate the legs in several different ways. The leg that had been immersed in the cocaine solution reacted very differently from the leg that had been immersed in salt water (Yentis and Vlassakov 1999).
  
Rolled up [[currency|banknotes]], hollowed-out [[pen]]s, cut [[drinking straw|straw]]s, pointed ends of keys, and specialized [[spoon]]s are often used to insufflate cocaine. Such devices are often referred to as "tooters" by users. The cocaine typically is poured onto a flat, hard surface (such as a [[mirror]]) and divided into "lines" (usually with a [[razor blade]], [[credit card]] or driver's license card), which are then insufflated. The amount of cocaine in a line varies widely from person to person and occasion to occasion (the purity of the cocaine is also a factor), but one line is generally considered to be a single dose.  However for addicts and even occasional users, many lines are often snorted to produce greater effects.
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[[Karl Koller (ophthalmologist)|Karl Koller]] experimented with cocaine for [[Ophthalmology|ophthalmic]] usage. In an infamous experiment in 1884, he experimented upon himself by applying a cocaine solution to his own eye and then pricking it with pins. His findings were presented to the Heidelberg Ophthalmological Society. Also in 1884, Jellinek demonstrated the effects of cocaine as a [[respiratory system]] anesthetic.  
  
====Injected====
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Cocaine was introduced into clinical use as a [[local anesthetic]] in Germany in 1884, about the same time as [[Sigmund Freud]] published his work ''Über Coca'', in which he wrote that cocaine causes:
The intravenous route of administration provides the highest blood levels of drug in the shortest amount of time. Upon injection, cocaine reaches the brain in a matter of seconds, and the exhilarating rush that follows can be so intense that it induces some users to vomit uncontrollably. The euphoria passes quickly. Aside from the toxic effects of cocaine, there is also danger of circulatory [[embolism|emboli]] from the insoluble substances that may be used to cut the drug. Obviously, there is also a risk of serious infection associated with the use of contaminated needles.
 
  
An injected mixture of cocaine and [[heroin]], known as “[[speedball (drug)|speedball]]” or “moonrock”, is a particularly popular and dangerous combination, as the converse effects of the drugs actually compliment each other, but may also mask the symptoms of an overdose. It has been responsible for numerous deaths, particularly in and around [[Los Angeles]], including celebrities such as [[John Belushi]], [[Chris Farley]] and [[Layne Staley]]. Experimentally, cocaine injections can be delivered to animals such as fruit flies to study the mechanisms of cocaine addiction.<ref>{{Cite journal|author=Dimitrijevic N, Dzitoyeva S, Manev H|title=An automated assay of the behavioral effects of cocaine injections in adult Drosophila|journal=J Neurosci Methods|year=2004|month=August|volume=137|issue=2|pages=181–184|url=http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=pubmed&dopt=Abstract&list_uids=15262059&query_hl=21|curly=1}}</ref>
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{{quote|Exhilaration and lasting euphoria, which in no way differs from the normal euphoria of the healthy person. You perceive an increase of self-control and possess more vitality and capacity for work. In other words, you are simply normal, and it is soon hard to believe you are under the influence of any drug. Long intensive physical work is performed without any fatigue. This result is enjoyed without any of the unpleasant after-effects that follow exhilaration brought about by alcohol. Absolutely no craving for the further use of cocaine appears after the first, or even after repeated taking of the drug.}}
  
====Smoked====
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In 1885, [[William Halsted]] demonstrated nerve-block anesthesia (Halsted 1885), and [[James Leonard Corning]] demonstrated [[peridural]] anesthesia (Corning 1885).
  
:''See also: [[Cocaine#Crack cocaine|crack cocaine]] above.''
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In 1885, the U.S. manufacturer [[Parke-Davis]] sold cocaine in various forms, including cigarettes, powder, and even a cocaine mixture that could be injected directly into the user's veins with the included needle. The company promised that its cocaine products would "supply the place of food, make the coward brave, the silent eloquent and render the sufferer insensitive to pain."
Smoking freebase or crack cocaine is most often accomplished using a pipe made from a small glass tube about one quarter-inch (about 6&nbsp;mm) in diameter and up to several inches long.  These are sometimes called "straight shooters," readily available in convenience stores or smoke shops. They will sometimes contain a small paper flower and are promoted as a romantic gift. Buyers usually ask for a "rose" or a "flower."  An alternate method is to use a small length of a radio antenna or similar metal tube.  To avoid burning the user’s fingers and lips on the metal pipe, a small piece of paper or cardboard (such as a piece torn from a matchbook cover) is wrapped around one end of the pipe and held in place with either a rubber band or a piece of adhesive tape. A popular (usually pejorative) term for crack pipes is "glass dick."
 
  
A small piece of steel or copper scouring pad — often called a [[Brillo Pad|"brillo"]] or [[Chore Boy|"chore"]], from the scouring pads of the same name — is placed into one end of the tube after having the [[soap]]y cleanser coating burned off the metal. It then serves as a crude filter in which the "rock" can melt and boil to vapor. The use of steel wool also acts as a reducing agent, preventing the oxidation of the cocaine.
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In 1898, [[Heinrich Quincke]] demonstrated the use of cocaine for [[spinal anesthesia]].
  
The "rock" is placed at the end of the pipe closest to the filter and the other end of the pipe is placed in the mouth. A flame from a cigarette lighter or handheld torch is then held under the rock. As the rock is heated, it melts and burns away to vapor, which the user inhales as smoke.  
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The first synthesis and elucidation of the structure of the cocaine molecule was by [[Richard Willstätter]] in 1898 (Humphrey and O'Hagan 2001). The synthesis started from [[tropinone]], a related natural product and took five steps.
The effects,felt almost immediately after smoking, are very intense and do not last long &mdash; usually five to fifteen minutes. Most users will want more after this time, especially frequent users. "Crack houses" depend on these cravings by providing users a place to smoke, and a ready supply of small bags for sale.
 
  
A heavily used crackpipe tends to fracture at the end from overheating with the flame used to heat the crack as the user attempts to inhale every bit of the drug on the metal wool filter.  The end is often broken further as the user "pushes" the pipe. "Pushing" is a technique used to partially recover crack that hardens on the inside wall of the pipe as the pipe cools. The user pushes the metal wool filter through the pipe from one end to the other to collect the build-up inside the pipe. The ends of the pipe can be broken by the object used to push the filter, frequently a small screwdriver or stiff piece of wire. The user will often remove the most jagged edges and continue using the pipe until it becomes so short that it burns the lips and fingers.  To continue using the pipe, the user will sometimes wrap a small piece of paper or cardboard around one end and hold it in place with a rubber band or adhesive tape.  Of course, not all people who smoke crack cocaine will let it get that short, and will get a new or different pipe. The tell-tale signs of a used crack pipe are a glass tube with burn marks at one or both ends and a clump of metal wool inside.
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[[File:Bundesarchiv Bild 102-07741, Berlin, "Koks Emil" der Kokain-Verkäufer.jpg|thumb|Prostitutes buy cocaine capsules from a drug dealer in Berlin, 1924]]
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In the early 20th century, products with cocaine became illegal in most countries outside of South America, after the addictive nature of cocaine was widely recognized.  
  
When smoked, cocaine is sometimes combined with other drugs, such as [[cannabis (drug)|cannabis]]; often rolled into a joint or [[Blunt (drug culture)|blunt]]. This combination is known as "[[primo]]", "hype", "shake and bake", "SnowCaps", "B-151er", a "cocoapuff", a "dirty" or a "woo". Crack smokers who are being drug tested may also make their "primo" with cigarette tobacco instead of cannabis, since a crack smoker can test clean within two to three days of use, if only urine (and not hair) is being tested.
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In the United States, the federal government instituted a national labeling requirement for cocaine and cocaine-containing products through the Food and Drug Act of 1906. The next impactful federal regulation was the Harrison Narcotics Tax Act of 1914. While this act is often seen as the start of prohibition, the act itself was not actually a prohibition on cocaine, but instead setup a regulatory and licensing regime. The Harrison Act left manufacturers of cocaine untouched so long as they met certain purity and labeling standards.Despite that cocaine was typically illegal to sell and legal outlets were more rare, the quantities of legal cocaine produced declined very little. Legal cocaine quantities did not decrease until the Jones-Miller Act of 1922 put serious restrictions on cocaine manufactures (Madge 2001; Gootenberg 1999).
  
Powder cocaine is sometimes smoked, but it is inefficient as the heat involved destroys much of the chemical. One way of smoking powder is to put a "bump" into the end of an unlit cigarette, smoking it in one go as the user lights the cigarette normally.
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As of 2012, Peru was the leading producer of pure cocaine, followed by Bolivia and Colombia. Colombia had been the leading producer for over a decade, producing three-quarters of the world's annual yield, but the U.S. launched at $7.5 billion effort in 1999 toward helping the Colombia government crack down on drug organizations and insurgencies. Peru had been the leading producer in the 1980s and 1990s (NBC 2012).
  
===Mechanism of action===
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== Notes==
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{{Reflist|colwidth=30em}}
  
The [[pharmacodynamics]] of cocaine is complex. One significiant effect of cocaine on the [[central nervous system]] is the blockage of the [[dopamine transporter]] protein (DAT), hence cocaine is called a [[dopamine reuptake inhibitor]]. Brain regions that are rich with dopaminergic neurons are the [[ventral tegmental area]] (VTA), the [[nucleus accumbens]] and the prefrontal [[Cerebral cortex|cortex]].<!--which of these are the pleasure centers?—>
 
  
A monoamine [[transmitter]] that is released by a neuron for signal firing is normally recycled via the transporter to terminate the signal and to spare transmitter resources. The transporter binds the transmitter and pumps it out of the synaptic cleft back into the pre-synaptic neuron. There it is taken up into storage [[Vesicle (biology)|vesicle]]s. Cocaine binds tightly at the DAT forming a complex that blocks the transporter's function, this also blocks the reuptake of the transmitter. Once released into the extracellular space (synaptic cleft) [[dopamine]] accumulates there, because the recycling mechanism is inhibited by the cocaine. This results in an enhanced and prolonged firing (boosted [[signal transduction]]).
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== References ==
  
Cocaine is also a less potent blocker of the [[monoamine transporter|norepinephrine transporter]] (NET) and [[serotonin transporter]] (SERT). Cocaine also blocks [[ion channel|sodium channels]], thereby interfering with the propagation of [[action potential]]s; thus, like [[lidocaine]] and [[novocaine]], it acts as a local anesthetic. The locomotor enhancing properties of cocaine may be attributable to its enhancement of dopaminergic transmission from the [[substantia nigra]]. Recent research points to an important role of circadian mechanisms [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=pubmed&dopt=Abstract&list_uids=12865893&query_hl=16] and clock genes [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=pubmed&dopt=Abstract&list_uids=15967985&query_hl=18] in behavioral actions of cocaine.
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* Aggrawal, A. 1995. ''Narcotic Drugs''. India: National Book Trust. ISBN 9788123713830.  
  
Because [[nicotine]] increases the levels of dopamine in the brain, many cocaine users find that consumption of [[tobacco]] products during cocaine use enhances the euphoria. This, however, may have undesirable consequences, such as uncontrollable [[chain smoking]] during cocaine use (even users who don't normally smoke [[cigarettes]] have been known to chain smoke when using cocaine), in addition to the detrimental health effects and the additional strain on the cardiovascular system caused by tobacco.
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* Altman, A. J., D. M. Albert, and G. A. Fournier. 1985. [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/3885453 Cocaine's use in ophthalmology: Our 100-year heritage]. ''Surv Ophthalmol'' 29(4): 300–6. PMID 3885453. Retrieved September 11, 2013.
  
===Metabolism and excretion===
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* Baigent, M. 2003. Physical complications of substance abuse: What the psychiatrist needs to know. ''Curr Opin Psychiatry'' 16(3): 291–296.  
Cocaine is extensively [[metabolism|metabolized]], primarily in the [[liver]], with only about 1% excreted unchanged in the urine. The metabolism is dominated by [[hydrolysis|hydrolytic]] [[ester]] cleavage, so the eliminated metabolites consist mostly of [[benzoylecgonine]], the major [[metabolite]], and in lesser amounts ecgonine methyl ester and ecgonine.  
 
  
If taken with [[ethanol|alcohol]], cocaine combines with the ethanol in the [[liver]] to form [[cocaethylene]], which is both more [[euphoria|euphorigenic]] and has higher [[cardiovascular]] toxicity than cocaine by itself.
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* Barnett, G., R. Hawks, and R. Resnick. 1981. [http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/0378874181900635 Cocaine pharmacokinetics in humans]. ''Journal of Ethnopharmacology'' 3(2–3): 353–66. PMID 7242115. Retrieved September 17, 2013.
  
Cocaine metabolites are detectable in urine for up to four days after cocaine is used. Benzoylecgonine can be detected in urine within four hours after cocaine inhalation and remains detectable in concentrations greater than 1000&nbsp;ng/ml for as long as 48 hours. Detection in hair is possible in regular users until the sections of hair grown during use are cut or fall out.
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* Bonkovsky, H. L., and S. Mehta. 2001. [http://www.jaad.org/article/S0190-9622%2801%2936071-1/abstract Hepatitis C: A review and update]. ''J. Am. Acad. Dermatol.'' 44(2): 159–82. PMID 11174373. Retrieved September 17, 2013.
  
===Effects and health issues===
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* Botany Central. 2013. [http://botanycentral.providence.wikispaces.net/Erythroxylum+coca Erythroxylum coca: The coca plant]. ''Botany Central''. Retrieved August 6, 2013.  
====Acute====
 
Cocaine is a potent [[central nervous system]] [[stimulant]]. Its effects can last from 20 minutes to several hours, depending upon the dosage of cocaine taken, purity, and method of administration.
 
  
The initial signs of stimulation are hyperactivity, restlessness, increased [[blood pressure]], increased [[heart rate]] and [[euphoria]]. The euphoria is sometimes followed by feelings of discomfort and depression and a craving to experience the drug again. Sexual interest and pleasure can be amplified. Side effects can include twitching, [[paranoia]], and impotence, which usually increases with frequent usage.
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* Boucher, D. H. 1991. Cocaine and the coca plant. ''BioScience'' 41(2): 72-76.
  
With excessive dosage the drug can produce [[hallucination]]s, paranoid delusions, [[tachycardia]], [[itch]]ing, and [[formication]].
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* Carta, M., A. M. Allan, L. D. Partridge, and C. F. Valenzuela. 2003. Cocaine inhibits 5-HT3 receptor function in neurons from transgenic mice overexpressing the receptor. ''Eur. J. Pharmacol.'' 459(2–3): 167–9. PMID 12524142.  
  
Overdose causes [[cardiac arrhythmia|tachyarrhythmias]] and a marked elevation of blood pressure. These can be life-threatening, especially if the user has existing cardiac problems.  
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* Casale, J. F., and R. F. X. Klein.  1993. [http://www.erowid.org/archive/rhodium/chemistry/cocaine.illicit.production.html Illicit production of cocaine]. ''Forensic Science Review'' 5: 95-107. Retrieved August 14, 2013.
  
The [[LD50|LD<sub>50</sub>]] of cocaine when administered to mice is 95.1 mg/kg. <ref>{{Cite journal|author=Bedford JA, Turner CE, Elsohly HN|title=Comparative lethality of coca and cocaine|journal=Pharmacol Biochem Behav|volume=17|issue=5|year=1982|pages=1087&ndash;1088|curly=true}}</ref> Toxicity results in seizures, followed by respiratory and circulatory depression of medullar origin. This may lead to death from [[respiratory failure]], [[stroke]], [[cerebral hemorrhage]], or [[heart]]-failure. Cocaine is also highly pyrogenic, because the stimulation and increased muscular activity cause greater heat production. Heat loss is inhibited by the intense [[vasoconstriction]]. Cocaine-induced [[hyperthermia]] may cause muscle cell destruction and [[myoglobinuria]] resulting in [[renal failure]]. There is no specific [[antidote]] for cocaine overdose.
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* Corning, J. L. 1885. An experimental study. ''New York Medical Journal'' 42: 483.
  
Cocaine's primary acute effect on brain chemistry is to raise the amount of dopamine and serotonin in the nucleus accumbens (the pleasure center in the brain); this effect ceases, due to metabolism of cocaine to inactive compounds and particularly due to the depletion of the transmitter resources ([[tachyphylaxis]]). This can be experienced acutely as feelings of depression, as a "crash" after the initial high. Further mechanisms occur in chronic cocaine use.
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* Cortes, R. 2013. [http://www.nydailynews.com/opinion/condemned-coca-leaf-article-1.1238569 The condemned coca leaf]. ''NY Daily News'' January 13, 2013. Retrieved August 11, 2013.  
  
====Chronic====
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* D'haenen, H. A. H., J. A. den Boer, and P. Willner. 2002. [http://books.google.com/?id=ZMSNFtyjtEAC&pg=PA528&lpg=PA528&dq=neuroprotective+dat+cocaine ''Biological Psychiatry'']. Wiley. ISBN 9780471491989. Retrieved September 17, 2013.
With chronic cocaine intake, brain cells functionally adapt (respond)<!--like muscles grow and degenerate—> to strong imbalances of transmitter levels in order to compensate extremes. So receptors<!--includes transporters—> disappear from or reappear on the cell surface, resulting more or less in an "off" or "working mode" respectively, or they change their susceptibility for binding partners (ligands) – mechanisms called [[downregulation|down-]]/[[upregulation]]. Chronic cocaine use leads to a DAT upregulation<!--(not down-) DA is taken up faster/fireing is reduced—>, further contributing to depressed mood states. Finally, a loss of [[vesicular monoamine transporter]]s appears to indicate a long term damage of dopamine neurons.
 
  
All these effects contribute to the rise in an abuser's tolerance thus requiring a larger dosage to achieve the same effect. The lack of normal amounts of serotonin and dopamine in the brain is the cause of the dysphoria and depression felt after the initial high. The diagnostic criteria for cocaine withdrawal is characterized by a dysphoric mood, fatigue, unpleasant dreams, insomnia or hypersomnia, E.D., increased appetite, psychomotor retardation or agitation, and anxiety.
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* Dietrich, J. B. 2009. [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19350275 Alteration of blood-brain barrier function by methamphetamine and cocaine]. ''Cell and tissue research'' 336(3): 385–392. PMID 19350275.  
  
Cocaine abuse also has multiple physical health consequences. It is associated with a lifetime risk of [[myocardial infarction|heart attack]] that is seven times that of non-users. During the hour after cocaine is used, [[heart attack]] risk rises 24-fold.
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* Dillehay, T. D., J. Rossen, D. Ugent, A. Karathanasis, V. Vásquez, and P. J. Netherly. 2010. [http://antiquity.ac.uk/ant/084/ant0840939.htm Early Holocene coca chewing in northern Peru]. ''Antiquity'' 84(326): 939–953. Retrieved August 14, 2013.
  
Side effects from chronic smoking of cocaine include chest pain, lung trauma, shortness of breath, sore throat, hoarse voice, [[dyspnea]], and an aching, [[flu]]-like syndrome. A common misconception is that the smoking of cocaine breaks down [[tooth enamel]] and causes [[tooth decay]]. Although this is not true, the lifestyle of frequent cocaine users may include poor dental hygiene, which often results in tooth decay. In addition, cocaine often causes involuntary tooth grinding, known as [[bruxism]], which can deteriorate tooth enamel and lead to [[gingivitis]]{{citation needed}}.
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* Fandiño, A. S., S. W. Toennes, and G. F. Kauert. 2002. Studies on hydrolytic and oxidative metabolic pathways of anhydroecgonine methyl ester (methylecgonidine) using microsomal preparations from rat organs. ''Chem. Res. Toxicol.'' 15(12): 1543–8. PMID 12482236.  
  
Chronic intranasal usage can degrade the [[cartilage]] separating the [[nostril]]s (the [[septum nasi]]), leading eventually to its complete disappearance. Due to the absorption of the cocaine from cocaine hydrochloride, the remaining hydrochloride forms a dilute hydrochloric acid.<ref name="pagliaros"/>
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* Filip, M., M. J. Bubar, and K. A. Cunningham. 2004. Contribution of serotonin (5-hydroxytryptamine; 5-HT) 5-HT2 receptor subtypes to the hyperlocomotor effects of cocaine: acute and chronic pharmacological analyses. ''J. Pharmacol. Exp. Ther.'' 310(3): 1246–54. PMID 15131246.
  
Cocaine may also greatly increase this risk of developing rare autoimmune or connective tissue diseases such as [[lupus]], [[Goodpasture's disease]], [[vasculitis]], [[glomerulonephritis]] and other diseases. [http://www.scienceblog.com/community/older/1999/A/199900322.html][http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=PubMed&list_uids=6725666&dopt=Abstract][http://content.karger.com/ProdukteDB/produkte.asp?Aktion=ShowFulltext&ProduktNr=223854&Ausgabe=224772&ArtikelNr=45328][http://jnnp.bmjjournals.com/cgi/content/full/65/1/10] While these conditions are normally found in chronic use they can also be caused by short term exposure in susceptible individuals.
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* Gaedcke, F. 1855. [http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/ardp.18551320208/abstract;jsessionid=714476B632CFE3954D9571D4A9862AE7.d01t01 Ueber das Erythroxylin, dargestellt aus den Blättern des in Südamerika cultivirten Strauches ''Erythroxylon coca'' Lam]. ''Archiv der Pharmazie'' 132(2): 141-150. Retrieved September 11, 2013.  
  
There have been published studies reporting that cocaine causes changes in the [[frontal lobe]] of the [[brain]]. The full extent of possible brain deterioration from cocaine use is not known.
+
* Gootenberg, P. (Ed.) 1999. ''Cocaine: Global Histories''. London: Routledge. ISBN 0203026462.  
  
===Cocaine as a local anesthetic===
+
* Halsted, W. 1885. Practical comments on the use and abuse of cocaine. ''New York Medical Journal'' 42: 294–295.
Cocaine was historically useful as a topical anesthetic in eye and nasal surgery, although it is now predominantly used for nasal and [[lacrimal duct]] surgery. The major disadvantages of this use are cocaine's intense [[vasoconstrictor]] activity and potential for [[cardiovascular]] toxicity. Cocaine has since been largely replaced in Western medicine by synthetic local anaesthetics such as [[benzocaine]], [[proparacaine]], and [[tetracaine]] though it remains available for use if specified. If vasoconstriction is desired for a procedure (as it reduces bleeding), the anesthetic is combined with a vasoconstrictor such as [[phenylephrine]] or [[epinephrine]]. In [[Australia]] it is currently prescribed for use as a local anesthetic for conditions such as mouth and lung [[ulcers]]. Some Australian [[ENT]] specialists occasionally use cocaine within the practice when performing procedures such as nasal [[cauterization]]. In this scenario dissolved cocaine is soaked into a ball of cotton wool, which is placed in the nostril for the 10-15 minutes immediately prior to the procedure, thus performing the dual role of both numbing the area to be cauterized and also vasoconstriction.
 
  
==Cocaine trade==
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* Humphrey, A. J., and D. O'Hagan. 2001. [http://pubs.rsc.org/en/Content/ArticleLanding/2001/NP/b001713m#!divAbstract Tropane alkaloid biosynthesis. A century old problem unresolved]. ''Nat Prod Rep'' 18(5): 494–502. PMID 11699882. Retrieved September 11, 2013.  
[[Image:Cocaine_bricks_scorpion_logo.jpg|right|thumb|Bricks of cocaine, a form in which it is commonly transported.]]
 
Because of the extensive processing it undergoes during preparation and its highly addictive nature, cocaine is generally treated as a '[[hard drug]]', with severe penalties for possession and trafficking. Demand remains high, and consequently black market cocaine is quite expensive. Unprocessed cocaine, such as [[coca leaves]], is occasionally bought and sold, but this is exceedingly rare as it is much easier and more profitable to conceal and smuggle it in powdered form.
 
  
===Production===
+
* Hurtado, J. 1995. ''Cocaine the Legend: About Coca and Cocaine'' La Paz, Bolivia: Accion Andina, ICORI.
[[As of 1999]], [[Colombia]] was the world's leading producer of cocaine. Three-quarters of the world's annual yield of cocaine was produced there, both from cocaine base imported from [[Peru]] (primarily the [[Huallaga Valley]]) and [[Bolivia]], and from locally grown [[coca]]. There was a 28 percent increase from the amount of potentially harvestable [[coca]] plants which were grown in [[Colombia]] in 1998. This, combined with crop reductions in [[Bolivia]] and [[Peru]], made [[Colombia]] the nation with the largest area of coca under cultivation. Coca grown for traditional purposes by indigenous communities, a use which is still present and is permitted by Colombian laws, only makes up a small fragment of total coca production, most of which is used for the illegal drug trade. Attempts to eradicate coca fields through the use of defoliants have devastated part of the farming economy in some coca growing regions of Colombia, and strains appear to have been developed that are more resistant or immune to their use.  Whether these strains are natural mutations or the product of human tampering is unclear. These strains have also shown to be more potent than those previously grown, increasing profits for the drug cartels responsible for the exporting of cocaine. The cultivation of coca has become an attractive, and in some cases even necessary, economic decision on the part of many growers due to the combination of several factors, including the persistence of worldwide demand, the lack of other employment alternatives, the lower profitability of alternative crops in official crop substitution programs, the eradication-related damages to non-drug farms, and the spread of new strains of the coca plant.
 
  
<table class="wikitable" style="margin: 1em auto 1em auto">
+
* Inciardi,J. A. 1992. ''The War on Drugs II: The Continuing Epic of Heroin, Cocaine, Crack, Crime, AIDS, and Public Policy''. Mayfield. ISBN 1559340169.  
<caption>Estimated Andean Region Coca Cultivation and Potential Pure Cocaine Production, 2000–2004. <ref>{{cite paper | author=[[NDIC]] | title=National Drug Threat Assessment 2006 | date=2006 | url=http://www.usdoj.gov/ndic/pubs11/18862/index.htm }}</ref><caption>
 
<tr><th></th><th>2000</th><th>2001</th><th>2002</th><th>2003</th><th>2004</th></tr>
 
<tr><td>Net Cultivation ([[1 E9 m²|km²]])</td><td>1875</td><td>2218</td><td>2007.5</td><td>1663</td><td>1662</td></tr>
 
<tr><td>Potential Pure Cocaine Production ([[tonne]]s)</td><td>770</td><td>925</td><td>830</td><td>680</td><td>645</td></tr></table>
 
  
===Trafficking and distribution===
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* Jaffe, J. A., and P. L. Kimmel. 2006. [http://cjasn.asnjournals.org/content/1/4/655 Chronic nephropathies of cocaine and heroin abuse: A critical review]. ''Clinical Journal of the American Society of Nephrology'' 1(4): 655-667. PMID 17699270. Retrieved September 17, 2013.
[[Organized crime|Organized criminal]] gangs operating on a large scale dominate the cocaine trade. Most cocaine is grown and processed in [[South America]], particularly in [[Colombia]] and [[Peru]], and smuggled into the [[United States]] and [[Europe]], where it is sold at huge markups.
 
  
Cocaine shipments from [[South America]] transported through [[Mexico]] or [[Central America]] are generally moved over land or by air to staging sites in northern Mexico. The cocaine is then broken down into smaller loads for smuggling across the [[US-Mexico border|U.S.–Mexico border]]. The primary cocaine importation points in the [[United States]] are in [[Arizona]], southern [[California]], southern [[Florida]], and [[Texas]]. Typically, land vehicles are driven across the U.S.-Mexico border.  
+
* Jeffrey, S., and C. Vega. 2007. [http://www.medscape.org/viewarticle/555229 Stimulant abuse may increase stroke among young adults]. ''Medscape''. Retrieved September 17, 2013.
  
Cocaine is also carried in small, concealed, kilogram quantities across the border by couriers known as “[[Mule (smuggling)|mules]]” (or “burros”), who cross a border either legally, e.g. through a port or airport, or illegally through undesignated points along the border. The drugs may be strapped to the waist or legs or hidden in bags, or hidden in the body. If the mule gets through without being caught, the gangs will reap most of the profits. If he or she is caught however, gangs will sever all links and the mule will usually stand trial for trafficking by him- or herself.
+
* Kolbrich, E. A., A. J. Barnes, D. A. Gorelick, S. J. Boyd, E. J. Cone, and M. A. Huestis. 2006. [http://openurl.ingenta.com/content/nlm?genre=article&issn=0146-4760&volume=30&issue=8&spage=501&aulast=Kolbrich Major and minor metabolites of cocaine in human plasma following controlled subcutaneous cocaine administration]. ''J Anal Toxicol'' 30(8): 501–10. PMID 17132243. Retrieved September 17, 2013.
  
Cocaine traffickers from [[Colombia]], and recently [[Mexico]], have also established a labyrinth of [[smuggling]] routes throughout the [[Caribbean]], the [[Bahama]] Island chain, and South [[Florida]]. They often hire traffickers from [[Mexico]] or the [[Dominican Republic]] to transport the drug. The traffickers use a variety of smuggling techniques to transfer their drug to U.S. markets. These include airdrops of 500&ndash;700&nbsp;kg in the [[Bahama Islands]] or off the coast of [[Puerto Rico]], mid-ocean boat-to-boat transfers of 500&ndash;2,000&nbsp;kg, and the commercial shipment of tonnes of cocaine through the port of [[Miami]].
+
* Liebowitz, M. R. 1983. ''The Chemistry of Love''. Boston: Little, Brown, & Co. ISNB 0316524301.
  
Bulk cargo ships are also used to smuggle cocaine to staging sites in the western [[Caribbean]]&ndash;[[Gulf of Mexico]] area. These vessels are typically 150&ndash;250&nbsp;foot (50&ndash;80&nbsp;m) coastal freighters that carry an average cocaine load of approximately 2.5 tonnes. Commercial fishing vessels are also used for smuggling operations. In areas with a high volume of recreational traffic, smugglers use the same types of vessels, such as [[go-fast boat]]s, as those used by the local populations.
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* Lluch, J., M. Rodríguez-Arias, M. A. Aguilar,and J. Miñarro. 2005. [http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0091305705003345 Role of dopamine and glutamate receptors in cocaine-induced social effects in isolated and grouped male OF1 mice]. ''Pharmacol. Biochem. Behav.'' 82(3): 478–87. PMID 16313950. Retrieved September 17, 2013.
  
It has been alleged that during the mid-1980s, the CIA stood by while Nicaraguan [[Contra (guerrillas)|Contras]], who were being supported by the CIA without Congressional approval, smuggled cocaine into the U.S. to finance their insurgency against the [[Sandinista]] government. [http://www2.gwu.edu/~nsarchiv/NSAEBB/NSAEBB2/nsaebb2.htm] Cocaine was sometimes brought into the U.S. on the return trip of aircraft chartered by the CIA to fly weapons to Central America.
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* Lowinson, J. H., P. Ruiz, and R. B. Millman. 2004. [http://books.google.com/?id=HtGb2wNsgn4C&pg=PA204&dq=cocaine+tolerance#v=onepage&q=cocaine%20tolerance&f=false Substance abuse: A comprehensive textbook], 4th edition. Lippincott Williams & Wilkins. ISBN 9780781734745. Retrieved September 17, 2013.
  
===="Black cocaine"====
+
* Madge, T. 2001. ''White Mischief: A Cultural History of Cocaine''. Edinburgh: Mainstream Publishing Company. ISBN 1840184051.
Traffickers have also started using a method whereby a substance such as [[iron thiocyanate]]<ref name="pagliaros"/>, a mixture of [[cobalt]] and [[ferric chloride]] <ref>{{cite paper | author=[[Australian Bureau of Criminal Intelligence]] | title=Australian Illicit Drug Report 1998&ndash;99 | date=1999 | url=http://www.crimecommission.gov.au/content/publications/aidr_2000/05_Cocaine.pdf |curly=true}}</ref>, or a mixture of [[charcoal]] and [[iron filings]] <ref name="stevemacko">{{cite news | first=Steve  | last=Macko | title=Colombia's new breed of drug trafficker | date=Friday, July 17, 1998 | publisher=Emergency Response and Research Institute, Chicago | url=http://www.emergency.com/clmbdeal.htm }}</ref> is added to cocaine hydrochloride to produce “black cocaine.” The cocaine in this substance is not detected by standard chemical tests such as the [[Becton Dickinson test]] kit. The substance was first identified after a seizure in March 1998 in Germany, which was then tracked back to discover 250&nbsp;lb of black cocaine ready for transport at [[Bogotá]]’s airport.  
 
<ref name="stevemacko"/>
 
  
===Eradication===
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* Mikkelson, B. 2011. [http://www.snopes.com/cokelore/cocaine.asp Cocaine-Cola]. ''Snopes.com''. Retrieved August 13, 2013.
{{main|coca eradication}}
 
Coca eradication is a policy strongly promoted by the US government through which it has tried to control the supply of cocaine by eliminating the coca plant from being grown as a [[crop]], especially during the [[Clinton Administration]]. This has involved [[aerial spraying]], cut-and-burn strategies, and the dissemination of a fungus designed to destroy coca plants. Despite destruction of coca plants, demand remains the same, and therefore reduced supply of the drug makes it more lucrative. The policy of eradicating coca plants is therefore very controversial, considering the U.S. government has no legal right to destroy the plants. As plant quantities and processing factories are discovered and destroyed, the price of cocaine rises, which in actuality causes more farmers to start harvesting coca.
 
  
==Addiction==
+
* Moore, P. M.,and B. Richardson. 1998. [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/9667555 Neurology of the vasculitides and connective tissue diseases]. ''J. Neurol. Neurosurg. Psychiatr.'' 65(1): 10–22. PMID 9667555. Retrieved September 17, 2013.  
'''Cocaine addiction''' is the excessive intake of cocaine, and can result in physiological damage, lethargy, depression, or a potentially fatal overdose.  The immediate craving to use more cocaine is strong and very common, because euphoric effects usually subside in most users within an hour of the last dosage, leading to serial cocaine readministrations, and prolonged, multi-dose binge use in those who are addicted. When administration stops after binge use, it is followed by a "crash", the onset of severly dysphoric mood with escalating exhaustion until sleep is achieved. Resumption of use may occur upon awakening or may not occur for several days, but the intense euphoria such use produce can, as it has in many users, produce intense craving and develop rather quickly into addiction.  Many habitual abusers develop a transient manic-like condition similar to [[amphetamine psychosis]] and [[schizophrenia]], whose symptoms include aggression, severe paranoia, and tactile hallucinations (including the feeling of insects under the skin, or "coke bugs") during binges. <ref>{{cite journal | author=Gawin. FH. | title=Cocaine addiction: Psychology and neurophysiology | journal=[[Science]] | year= 1991 | volume=251|pages=1580&ndash;1586 |url=http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=pubmed&dopt=Abstract&list_uids=2011738&query_hl=18 |curly=true}}</ref>
 
  
Cocaine has positive reinforcement effects, which refers to the effect that certain stimuli have on behavior. Good feelings become associated with the drug, causing a frequent user to take the drug as a response to bad news or mild [[depression (mood)|depression]]. This activation strengthens the response that was just made. If the drug was taken by a fast acting route such as injection or inhalation, the response will be the act of taking more cocaine, so the response will be reinforced. Powder cocaine, being a [[club drug]] is mostly consumed in the evening and night hours. Because cocaine is a [[stimulant]], a user will often drink large amounts of [[alcohol]] during and after usage or smoke [[cannabis]] to dull "crash" effects and hasten slumber. [[Benzodiazepines]] (e.g. xanax, rohypnol) are also used for this purpose. Other drugs such as heroin and various pharmaceuticals are often used to amplify reinforcement or to minimize such negative effects, further increasing addiction potential and harmfulness.
+
* Nainggolan, L. 2010. [http://www.theheart.org/article/1039143.do Cocaine-related sudden death not so rare]. ''Heartwire''. Retrieved Sept. 17, 2013
  
It is speculated that cocaine's addictive properties stem partially from its [[DAT]]-blocking effects (in particular, increasing the dopaminergic transmission from [[ventral tegmental area]] neurons). However, a study has shown that mice with no dopamine transporters still exhibit the rewarding effects of cocaine administration. <ref>{{cite journal | author=Sora, et al. | title=Cocaine reward models: Conditioned place preference can be established in dopamine- and in serotonin-transporter knockout mice | journal=[[PNAS]] | year=June 23, 1998 | volume=95|issue=13 |pages=7600&ndash;7704 |url=http://www.pnas.org/cgi/content/full/95/13/7699 |curly=true}}</ref> Later work demonstrated that a combined DAT/SERT knockout eliminated the rewarding effects.<ref>{{cite journal | author=Sora, et al. | title=Molecular mechanisms of cocaine reward: Combined dopamine and serotonin transporter knockouts eliminate cocaine place preference | journal=[[PNAS]] | year=April 24, 2001 | volume=98|issue=9 |pages=5300&ndash;5305 |url=http://www.pnas.org/cgi/content/full/98/9/5300 |curly=true}}</ref> The rewarding effects of cocaine are influenced by [[circadian rhythms]] <ref>{{cite journal | author=Kurtuncu et al. | title=Involvement of the pineal gland in diurnal cocaine reward in mice | journal=European Journal of Pharmacology | year=April 12, 2004 | volume=489|issue=3 |pages=203&ndash;205 |url=http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=pubmed&dopt=Abstract&list_uids=15087244&query_hl=23 |curly=true}}</ref>, possibly by involving a set of genes termed "clock genes".
+
* Nathanson, J. A., E. J. Hunnicutt, L. Kantham, and C. Scavone. 1993. [http://www.pnas.org/content/90/20/9645.full.pdf Cocaine as a naturally occurring insecticide]. ''Proc. Nat. Acad. Sci.'' 90: 9645-9648. Retrieved September 17, 2013.
<ref>{{cite journal | author=Yuferov et al. | title=Biological clock: biological clocks may modulate drug addiction | journal=European Journal of Human Genetics | year=October 2005 | volume=13|issue=10 |pages=1101&ndash;1103 |url=http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=pubmed&dopt=Abstract&list_uids=16094306&query_hl=18 |curly=true}}</ref> However, chronic cocaine addiction is not solely due to cocaine reward. Chronic repeated use is needed to produce cocaine-induced changes in brain reward centers and consequent chronic dysphoria (described above under "Effects and Health Issues - Chronic"). Dysphoria magnifies craving for cocaine because cocaine reward rapidly, abliet transiently, improves mood. This contributes to continued use and a self-perpetuating, worsening condition, since those addicted usually cannot appreaciate that long-term effects are oppostie those occurring immediately after use.  
 
  
===Treatment===
+
* National Institutes of Health/National Institute On Drug Abuse (NIH/NIDA). 2003. [http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2003/05/030506073758.htm Sigma receptors play role in cocaine-induced suppression of immune system]. ''ScienceDaily''. Retrieved September 5, 2013.
[[Cognitive Behavioral Therapy]] (CBT) shows promising results. One or more [[cocaine vaccine]]s exist or are on trial that will stop desirable effects from the drug. The National Institutes of Health of an unspecified country is researching modafinil, a narcolepsy drug and mild stimulant, as a potential cocaine treatment.  [[Twelve-step program]]s such as [[Cocaine Anonymous]] (modeled on [[Alcoholics Anonymous]]) which require a belief in god or potentially another higher power have no proven effect as Alcholics Anonymous does not release any quantifable measure of its success rates although there are an undeterminable number who claim this has aided them.
 
  
====GVG====
+
* NBC Worldnews. 2012. [http://worldnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2012/07/31/13045253-us-peru-overtakes-colombia-as-top-cocaine-producer?lite Peru overtakes Colombia as top cocaine producer]. ''NBC News'' July 31, 2012. Retrieved September 17, 2013.
[[Image:Dopamine_monkey.png|300px|right|thumb|[[Positron Emission Tomography]] scans showing the average level of dopamine receptors in six primates' brains. Red is high- and blue is low-concentration of dopamine receptors. The higher the level of dopamine, the fewer receptors there will be.]]
+
 +
* Nelson, G. 1998. ''Hip Hop America''. New York: Viking Penguin. ISBN 0670871532.
  
Studies have shown that [[gamma vinyl-gamma-aminobutyric acid]] (gamma vinyl-GABA, or GVG), a drug normally used to treat [[epilepsy]], blocks cocaine's action in the [[brain]]s of [[primate]]s. GVG increases the amount of the neurotransmitter [[gamma-aminobutyric acid|GABA]] in the brain and reduces the level of [[dopamine]] in the region of the brain that is thought to be involved in addiction. In January 2005 the [[U.S. Food and Drug Administration]] gave permission for a Phase I [[clinical trial]] of GVG for the treatment of addiction. Another drug currently tested for anti-addictive properties is the cannabinoid antagonist [[rimonabant]].
+
* Niemann, A. 1860. [http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/ardp.18601530202/abstract Ueber eine neue organische Base in den Cocablättern]. ''Archiv der Pharmazie'' 153(2): 129-256. Retrieved September 11, 2013.
  
====GBR 12909====
+
* Nutt, D., L. A. King, W. Saulsbury, and C. Blakemore, [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17382831 Development of a rational scale to assess the harm of drugs of potential misuse]. ''The Lancet'' 369, iss. 9566 (2007): 1047–1053. Retrieved September 3, 2013
GBR 12909 ([[Vanoxerine]]) is a [[dopamine reuptake inhibitor|selective dopamine uptake inhibitor]]. Because of this, it reduces cocaine's effect on the brain, and may help to treat cocaine addiction. Studies have shown that GBR, when given to primates, suppresses cocaine self-administration.
 
  
====Venlafaxine====
+
* Office of Diversion Control (ODC). 2011. [http://www.deaDiversion.usdoj.gov/fed_regs/imprt/reg/2011 Importers Notice of Registration - 2011]. ''Drug Enforcement Agency, U.S. Department of Justice''. Retrieved August 14, 2013.  
[[Venlafaxine]] ([[Effexor]]), although not a dopamine re-uptake inhibitor, is a potent [[serotonin-norepinephrine reuptake inhibitor]] that has been successfully used to combat the depression caused by cocaine and to a lesser extent, the addiction associated with the drug itself. Venlafaxine has been shown to have significant withdrawal problems itself, and can lead to lifetime use due to these withdrawal effects. A statistically significant number of people prescribed Effexor have committed suicide (2 attempts per 1000 patients, vs 1.56 suicides per 1,000 untreated depressives).
 
  
====Coca tea====
+
* Pagliaro, L., and A. M. Pagliaro. 2004. ''Pagliaros’ Comprehensive Guide to Drugs and Substances of Abuse''. Washington, D.C.: American Pharmacists Association. ISBN 9781582120669.
Coca herbal tea has been used for the treatment of cocaine dependence. In one study, coca tea was used—in addition to counseling—to treat 23 addicted coca-paste smokers in [[Lima]], [[Peru]]. Relapses fell from an average of 4.35 times per month before treatment with coca tea to 1.22 during the treatment. Abstinence length increased from an average of 32 days prior to treatment to 217.2 days during treatment. These results suggest that coca tea is an effective method for preventing relapse during treatment for cocaine addiction.<ref>{{cite journal|author=Teobaldo, Llosa|title=The Standard Low Dose of Oral Cocaine: Used for Treatment of Cocaine Dependence|journal=Substance Abuse|year=1994|volume=15|issue=4|pages=215&ndash;220|curly=true}}</ref>
 
  
==Legal status==
+
* Peces, R., R. A. Navascués, J. Baltar, M. Seco, and J. Alvarez. 1999. [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/10095180 Antiglomerular basement membrane antibody-mediated glomerulonephritis after intranasal cocaine use]. ''Nephron'' 81(4): 434-438. PMID 10095180. Retrieved September 17, 2013.  
The production, the distribution and the sale of cocaine products is restricted (and illegal in most contexts) in most countries. See ''[[legal status of cocaine]]'' for more information. 
 
Since 1914, when The Harrison Narcotics Tax Act passed in the U.S., cocaine has been considered a ‘hard drug’ ever since. In [[Colombia]], the indigenous population is allowed to grow coca for traditional reasons.{{fact}}  All other coca is considered part of the illegal black market.  In parts of Africa, it is a crime to be in possession of cocaine or even be seen with it. In South America, cultivation of coca is allowed only with special permission; however, it is a crime to posses processed cocaine.  Some parts of Europe and Australia allow processed cocaine for medicinal uses only. Also, in some parts of the Middle East and Asia, being in possession of cocaine can be punishable by death. [http://www.cocaineaddictiondrugrehab.com/crack-cocaine-laws.htm]
 
  
==Usage==
+
* Plowman, T, and L. Rivier. 1983. Cocaine and Cinnamoylcocaine content of thirty-one species of ''Erythroxylum'' (Erythroxylaceae)". ''Annals of Botany'' 51: 641–659.
{{worldwide}}
 
===In the United States===
 
====Overall usage====
 
  
In the late 1800's many authors, including [[Freud]], of this time openly admitted to going on cocaine binges to complete their works. But at the turn of the twentieth century, the dangers of cocaine were becoming apparent and the public did not want a society of drug addicts.  There was a public outcry against the use and abuse of cocaine.  Groups were demonizing cocaine users as the low lives of society. There was also a racial backlash, and many people blamed the African American community.  
+
* Reist, M. 2005. [http://www.journalstar.com/news/local/article_28e66c86-1ef8-52dc-ac0a-f3933ed6ec5a.html A rose by another name: Crack pipe]. ''Lincoln Journal Star'' January 16, 2005. Retrieved September 17, 2013.  
  
During the 60's Cocaine had mainstreamed again, yet it was still illegal. Prices of cocaine began to rise, and those of the lower class could no longer afford their addiction. Cocaine has become the second most popular illegal recreational drug in the U.S.[http://www.erowid.org/chemicals/cocaine/cocaine.shtml] Cocaine is generally used by privileged middle to upper class communities. It is also very popular amongst college students, not just to study with, but also to party with. Its users span over different ages, races, and professions.
+
* Ries, R. K., S. C. Miller, and D. A. Fiellin. 2009. [http://books.google.com/books?id=j6GGBud8DXcC&pg=PT166&dq=98%C2%B0C+pure+easy+to+smoke+cocaine&hl=en&sa=X&ei=ZUjfUJ7_MeSF2gX8gYHoBw&ved=0CDcQ6AEwAQ ''Principles of Addiction Medicine'']. Lippincott Williams & Wilkins. ISBN 0781774772.  
  
The National Household Survey on Drug Abuse (NHSDA) reported in 1999 that cocaine was used by 3.7 million Americans, or 1.7 percent of the household population age 12 and older. Estimates of the current number of those who use cocaine regularly (at least once per month) vary, but 1.5 million is a widely accepted figure within the research community.  
+
* Rivera, M. A., A. C. Aufderheide, L. W. Cartmell, C. M. Torres, and O. Langsjoen. 2005. [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16480174 Antiquity of coca-leaf chewing in the south central Andes: A 3,000 year archaeological record of coca-leaf chewing from northern Chile.] ''Journal of Psychoactive Drugs'' 37(4): 455–458. Retrieved August 14, 2013.  
  
Although cocaine use had not significantly changed over the six years prior to 1999, the number of first-time users went from 574,000 in 1991, to 934,000 in 1998 &mdash; an increase of 63%. While these numbers indicated that cocaine is still widely present in the United States, cocaine use was significantly less prevalent than it was during the early 1980s. Cocaine use peaked in 1982 when 10.4 million Americans (5.6 percent of the population) reportedly used the drug.
+
* Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew. 1985. [http://plants.jstor.org/upwta/2_42 Entry for ''Erythroxylum coca'' Lam. [family ERYTHROXYLACEAE]]. ''JSTOR''. Retrieved August 6, 2013.
  
====Usage among youth====
+
* Scheidweiler, K. B., M. A. Plessinger, J. Shojaie, R. W. Wood, and T. C. Kwong. 2003. [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/14561847 Pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of methylecgonidine, a crack cocaine pyrolyzate]. ''Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics'' 307(3): 1179-87. PMID 14561847. Retrieved September 17, 2013.
The 1999 [[Monitoring the future|Monitoring the Future]] (MTF) survey found the proportion of American students reporting use of powder cocaine rose during the 1990s. In 1991, 2.3 percent of eighth-graders stated that they had used cocaine in their lifetime. This figure rose to 4.7 percent in 1999. For the older grades, increases began in 1992 and continued through the beginning of 1999. Between those years, lifetime use of cocaine went from 3.3 percent to 7.7 percent for tenth-graders and from 6.1 percent to 9.8 percent for twelfth-graders. Lifetime use of crack cocaine, according to MTF, also increased among eighth-, tenth-, and twelfth-graders, from an average of 2 percent in 1991 to 3.9 percent in 1999.  
 
  
Perceived risk and disapproval of cocaine and crack use both decreased during the 1990s at all three grade levels. The 1999 NHSDA found the highest rate of monthly cocaine use was for those aged 18&ndash;25 at 1.7 percent, an increase from 1.2 percent in 1997. Rates declined between 1996 and 1998 for ages 26&ndash;34, while rates slightly increased for the 12&ndash;17 and 35+ age groups. Studies also show people are experimenting with cocaine at younger ages. NHSDA found a steady decline in the mean age of first use from 23.6 years in 1992 to 20.6 years in 1998.
+
* Sharma, H. S., D. Muresanu, A. Sharma, and R. Patnaik. 2009. [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19897082 Cocaine-induced breakdown of the blood brain barrier and neurotoxicity]. ''International Review of Neurobiology'' 88: 297–334. PMID 19897082. Retrieved September 17, 2013.  
  
====Availability====
+
* Spanagel, R., and F. Weiss. 1999. [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/10529820 The dopamine hypothesis of reward: Past and current status]. ''Trends Neurosci.'' 22(11): 521–7. PMID 10529820. Retrieved September 17, 2013.
Cocaine is readily available in all major U.S. metropolitan areas. According to the ''Summer 1998 Pulse Check,'' published by the U.S. [[Office of National Drug Control Policy]], cocaine use had stabilized across the country, with a few increases reported in [[San Diego]], [[Bridgeport, Connecticut|Bridgeport]], [[Miami, Florida|Miami]], and [[Boston, Massachusetts|Boston]]. In the West, cocaine usage was lower, which was thought to be because some users were switching to [[methamphetamine]], which was cheaper and provides a longer-lasting high. Numbers of cocaine users are still very large, with a concentration among city-dwelling youth.
 
  
==Works concerning cocaine==
+
* Spillane, J. F. 2000. ''Cocaine: From Medical Marvel to Modern Menace in the United States, 1884–1920''. Baltimore and London: The John Hopkins University Press. ISBN 0801862302.  
===Books about cocaine===
 
*''[[Special:Booksources/0312422261|Cocaine: an unauthorized biography]]'' by [[Dominic Streatfeild]]
 
*''[[Novel, With Cocaine]]'', by [[M. Ageyev]]
 
*''[[Über Coca]]'' by [[Sigmund Freud]]
 
*''The Triumph of Surgery'' by [[Jürgen Thorwald]] - Ch. 6 - The second battle against Pain (The early use of cocaine solution in eye surgery)
 
*''More, Now, Again'' by [[Elizabeth Wurtzel]]
 
*''Snowblind'' by [[Robert Sabbag]]
 
*''The Man Who Made It Snow'' by Max Mermelstein.  ISBN 0671703129
 
* Celerino III Castillo & Dave Harmon (1994). ''Powderburns: Cocaine, Contras & the Drug War'', Sundial. ISBN 0889625786 (paperback) ISBN 0809548550 (hardcover; Borgo Pr; 3rd ed.; 1995).
 
* Alexander Cockburn & Jeffrey St. Clair (1999). ''Whiteout: The CIA, Drugs and the Press'', Verso. ISBN 1859841392 (cloth), ISBN 1859842585 (paperback). Cites 116 books.
 
* Frederick P. Hitz (1999). ''Obscuring Propriety: The CIA and Drugs, International Journal of Intelligence and Counterintelligence'', 12(4): 448-462 DOI:10.1080/088506099304990
 
* Robert Parry (1999). ''Lost History: Contras, Cocaine, the Press & “[[Project Truth]]”'', Media Consortium. ISBN 1893517004.
 
* Richard Smart (Hard Cover 1985). ''The Snow Papers''  The Atlantic Monthly Press  ISBN 0-87113-030-0
 
* Peter Dale Scott & Jonathan Marshall (1991). ''Cocaine Politics: Drugs, Armies, and the CIA in Central America'', University of California Press. ISBN 0520214498 (paperback, 1998 reprint), ISBN 0520073126 (hardcover, 1991), ISBN 0520077814 (paperback, 1992 reprint).
 
* [[Gary Webb]](1998). ''Dark Alliance: The CIA, the Contras, and the Crack Cocaine Explosion'', Seven Stories Press. ISBN 1888363681 (hardcover, 1998), ISBN 1888363932 (paperback, 1999).
 
* [[Philippe Bourgois]] ''In Search of Respect: Selling Crack in El Barrio''. New York: Cambridge University Press. 2003. Second Updated Edition.
 
* [[Otto Snow]] ''THC & Tropacocaine'' ISBN 0966312856 (paperback 2004)
 
* [[David Lee]] ''Cocaine Handbook'' ISBN 091590456X (paperback 1981)
 
* [[Adam Gottlieb]] ''Cocaine Tester's Handbook'' ASIN B0007C137A (paperback 1975)
 
* [[Adam Gottlieb]] ''Pleasures of Cocaine: If You Enjoy: This Book May Save Your Life'' ISBN 091417181X (paperback 1996)
 
* [[Carol Saline]]  ''Doctor Snow: How the FBI Nailed a Ivy League Coke King'' ISBN 0-453-00593-4 (HardCover 1986)
 
* [[Mark Bowden]] ''Doctor Dealer: The Rise & Fall Of An All American Boy and his Multi-Million Dollar Cocaine Empire'' ISBN 0-446-51382-2 (HardCover 1987)
 
* ''Less Than Zero'' by [[Bret Easton Ellis]]  (1985)
 
  
===Movies about cocaine===
+
* Trozak, D.,and W. Gould. 1984. [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/6725666 Cocaine abuse and connective tissue disease]. ''J Am Acad Dermatol'' 10(3): 525. PMID 6725666. Retrieved September 17, 2013.
The following films feature the use or trade of cocaine as a major plot element
 
* ''[[Bad Lieutenant]]'' directed by [[Abel Ferrara]]
 
* ''[[Better Luck Tomorrow]]'' directed by [[Justin Lin (director)|Justin Lin]]
 
* ''[[Blow (movie)|Blow]]'' directed by [[Ted Demme]]
 
* ''[[Bolletjes Blues]]'' (2006)
 
* ''[[Boogie Nights]]'' directed by [[Paul Thomas Anderson]]
 
* ''[[The Boost]]'' directed by [[Harold Becker]]
 
* ''[[Bright Lights, Big City]]'' directed by [[James Bridges]]
 
* ''[[City of God (film)|City of God]]'' directed by [[Kátia Lund]] and [[Fernando Meirelles]]
 
* ''[[Clean and Sober]]'' directed by [[Glenn Gordon Carron]]
 
* ''[[Federal Hill (film)|Federal Hill]]'' directed by [[Michael Corrente]]
 
* ''[[Goodfellas]]'' directed by [[Martin Scorsese]]
 
* ''[[Into the Blue]]'' directed by [[John Stockwell (actor)|John Stockwell]]
 
* ''[[Just Say Know]]'' directed by [[Tao Ruspoli]]
 
* ''[[Layer Cake (film)|Layer Cake]]'' directed by [[Matthew Vaughn]]
 
* ''[[Less Than Zero]]'' directed by [[Marek Kanievska]]
 
* ''[[Lord of War]]'' directed by [[Andrew Niccol]]
 
* ''[[Maria Full of Grace]]'' directed by [[Joshua Marston]]
 
* ''[[Menace II Society]]'' directed by [[Albert Hughes]]
 
* ''[[New Jack City]]'' directed by [[Mario Van Peebles]]
 
* ''[[Scarface (1983 movie)|Scarface]]'' directed by [[Brian de Palma]]
 
* ''[[The Seven-Per-Cent Solution]]'' directed by [[Herbert Ross]]
 
* ''[[Starsky & Hutch]]'' directed by [[Todd Phillips]]
 
* ''[[Requiem for a Dream]]'' Directed by [[Darren Aronofsky]]
 
* ''[[Traffic (movie)|Traffic]]'' directed by [[Steven Soderbergh]]
 
* ''[[True Romance]]'' directed by [[Tony Scott]]
 
* ''[[Wonderland]]'' directed by [[James Cox]]
 
  
===See also===
+
* United Nations Office of Drugs and Crime (USODC). 2007. [http://www.unodc.org/pdf/research/wdr07/WDR_2007.pdf ''2007 World Drug Report]. ''United Nations''. Retrieved September 17, 2013.
* [[List of songs about drugs#Cocaine|List of songs about cocaine]]
 
  
==See also==
+
* United Nations Office of Drugs and Crime (USODC). 2011. [http://www.unodc.org/documents/data-and-analysis/Studies/Transatlantic_cocaine_market.pdf The transatlantic cocaine market: Research paper]. ''United Nations''. Retrieved August 13, 2013.
*[[Benzocaine]]
 
*[[Coca]]
 
*[[Coca eradication]]
 
*[[Crack baby]]
 
*[[Crack Epidemic]]
 
*[[Cuscohygrine]]
 
*[[Dihydrocuscohygrine]]
 
*[[Drug addiction]]
 
*[[Drugs and prostitution]]
 
*[[Ecgonine benzoate]]
 
*[[Hydroxytropacocaine]]
 
*[[Hygrine]]
 
*[[Methylecgonine cinnamate]]
 
*[[Procaine|Novocaine]]
 
*[[Tropacocaine]]
 
*[[Truxilline]]
 
*[[Psychoactive drug]]
 
*[[(-)-2-ß-Carbomethoxy-3-ß-(4-fluorophenyl)tropane naphthalenedisulfonate]] (CFT, WIN-35,428)
 
  
==External links==
+
* van der Woude, F. J. 2000. [http://ndt.oxfordjournals.org/content/15/3/299.full Cocaine use and kidney damage]. ''Nephrology Dialysis Transplantation'' 15(3): 299–301. PMID 10692510. Retrieved September 17, 2013.
{{Wiktionary}}
 
*[http://www.ca.org/literature/selftest.htm Self-test] &mdash; from Cocaine Addicts Anonymous
 
*[http://www.CocaineHelp.org Cocaine User Helping Hand] &mdash; Internet Portal dedicated to help crack- and cocaine-addicted people. Contains wide variety of information on drug abuse, available treatment, and recovery issues.
 
*[http://www.thegooddrugsguide.com/cocaine/index.htm Good Drugs Guide]
 
*[http://www.erowid.org/chemicals/cocaine/cocaine.shtml The Erowid Cocaine Vault]
 
*[http://www.snopes.com/cokelore/cocaine.asp Urban Legends Reference Pages: Cokelore (Cocaine-Cola)] &mdash; information about cocaine in Coke
 
*[http://www.pdxnorml.org/NYT_addictive_080294.html Addictive properties]
 
*[http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/12.11/columbia.html The Mystery of the Coca Plant that Wouldn't Die] - Wired Magazine
 
*[http://www.sharedresponsibility.gov.co/ Shared Responsibility] &mdash; Information about European cocaine use and drug trafficking in Colombia.
 
*[http://sun.ars-grin.gov:8080/npgspub/xsql/duke/chemdisp.xsql?chemical=COCAINE Cocaine content of plants]
 
*[http://www.cocaine.org Cocaine.org] &mdash; A very thorough information guide on Cocaine and its history, use/abuse, etc.
 
*[http://www.janes.com/security/law_enforcement/news/jir/jir060407_1_n.shtml Jane's Police news on European cocaine seizures, April 2006]
 
*[http://www.havocscope.com/Drugs/cocaine.htm Cocaine Financial Market Information from Havocscope]
 
  
== References ==
+
* Vasica, G., and C. C. Tennant. 2002. [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/12197823 Cocaine use and cardiovascular complications]. ''Med. J. Aust.'' 177(5): 260–2. PMID 12197823.
<references/>
+
 
 +
* Volkow, N. D., G.-J. Wang, M. W. Fischman, R. Foltin, J. S. Fowler, D. Franceschi, M. Franceschi, J. Logan, and S. J. Gatley. 2000. Effects of route of administration on cocaine induced dopamine transporter blockade in the human brain. ''Life Sciences'' 67(12): 1507-1515. PMID  10983846.
 +
 
 +
* WebMD. 2013a. [http://www.webmd.com/mental-health/cocaine-use-and-its-effects Cocaine use and its effects]. ''WebMD''. Retrieved August 12, 2013.
 +
 
 +
* WebMD. 2013b. [http://www.webmd.com/vitamins-supplements/ingredientmono-748-COCA.aspx?activeIngredientId=748&activeIngredientName=COCA Find a vitamin or supplement: Coca]. ''WebMD''. Retrieved August 13, 2013.
 +
 
 +
* World Health Organization (WHO). 2004. [http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=G9OhG-dZdAwC&lpg=PP1&pg=PA89#v=onepage&q=&f=false ''Neuroscience of Psychoactive Substance Use and Dependence'']. ''World Health Organization''. Retrieved September 17, 2013.
 +
 
 +
* World Health Organization (WHO). 2007. [http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=ptVjyRs7AdsC&lpg=PP1&pg=PA242#v=onepage&q=&f=false ''International Medical Guide for Ships'']. ''World Health Organization''. Retrieved September 17, 2013.
 +
 
 +
* Yang, Y., Q. Ke, J. Cai, Y. F. Xiao, and J. P. Morgan. 2001. [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11159694 Evidence for cocaine and methylecgonidine stimulation of M2 muscarinic receptors in cultured human embryonic lung cells]. ''Br. J. Pharmacol.'' 132(2): 451–60. PMID 11159694. Retrieved September 17, 2013.
  
{{stimulants}}
+
* Yentis, S. M.,and K. V. Vlassakov. 1999. Vassily von Anrep, forgotten pioneer of regional anesthesia. ''Anesthesiology'' 90(3): 890–5. PMID 10078692.
  
{{credit|61792817}}
+
* Zhao, W. 2008. [http://books.google.com/books?id=AF8zjRBtSuIC&pg=PA3&lpg=PA3&dq=cocaine+itching+tachycardia&source=bl&ots=5-DHw1heiO&sig=PzWxJXBYopA-2wZJAnTkneQSGa8&hl=en&sa=X&ei=4U5hUMDdGY-JqQGvk4D4BQ&ved=0CDIQ6AEwAA#v=onepage&q=cocaine%20itching%20tachycardia&f=false} ''Mechanisms Mediating Sex Differences in the Effects of Cocaine'']. ProQuest. ISBN 0549994580. Retrieved September 17, 2013.
  
  
 +
{{credit|Cocaine|565929556|Tropane_alkaloid|564202207}}
  
 
[[Category:Life sciences]]
 
[[Category:Life sciences]]
 +
[[Category:Health and disease]]
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[[Category:Drugs]]

Latest revision as of 12:49, 23 September 2013

Cocaine chemical structure
Cocaine3Dan.gif
Cocaine
Systematic name
IUPAC name
methyl (1R,2R,3S,5S)-3- (benzoyloxy)-8-methyl-8-azabicyclo[3.2.1] octane-2-carboxylate
Identifiers
CAS number 50-36-2
ATC code N01BC01 R02AD03, S01HA01, S02DA02
PubChem 5760
DrugBank DB00907
Chemical data
Formula C17H21NO4 
Mol. weight 303.353 g/mol
SMILES CN1[C@H]2CC[C@@H]1[C@H]([C@H](C2)OC(=O)c3ccccc3)C(=O)OC
Synonyms methylbenzoylecgonine, benzoylmethylecgonine, ecgonine methyl ester benzoate, 2b-Carbomethoxy −3b-benzoyloxy tropane
Physical data
Melt. point 98°C (208°F)
Boiling point 187°C (369°F)
Solubility in water HCl: 1800–2500 mg/mL (20°C)
Pharmacokinetic data
Bioavailability Oral: 33%[1]
Insufflated: 60[2]–80%[3]
Nasal Spray: 25[4]–43%[1]
Metabolism Hepatic CYP3A4
Half life 1 hour
Excretion Renal (benzoylecgonine and ecgonine methyl ester)
Therapeutic considerations
Pregnancy cat. C
Legal status ?
Dependence Liability High
Routes Topical, Oral, Insufflation, IV, PO

Cocaine is a crystalline tropane alkaloid (benzoylmethylecgonine, C17H21NO4) found in the leaves of the coca plant and best known in its concentrated form as an addictive, and generally illegal, psychoactive recreational drug.

Although the amount of cocaine in coca leaves is low, when this alkaloid is chemically extracted and concentrated it results in a powerful nervous system stimulant, which is generally used nasally, smoked, or injected. As such, cocaine can be highly addictive and have deleterious impacts on the brain, heart, respiratory system, kidneys, sexual system, and gastrointestinal tract. In most countries, the production, distribution, sale, and possession of cocaine products is restricted and/or illegal. However, cocaine also has some medical use and in some countries is available by prescription for such purposes as external application to the skin to numb pain, although derivatives such as lidocaine and novocaine have largely replaced it.

Use of concentrated cocaine yields pleasure through its interference with neurotransmitters of the sympathetic nervous system, such as blocking dopamine from being reabsorbed and thus resulting in continual stimulation. As such, cocaine subverts a natural system for experiencing pleasure and, ironically, the user can reach a state in which he or she has difficulty experiencing pleasure without the drug. In addition to medical problems from the drug, including sudden death, cocaine is one of the most addictive recreational drugs and intense cravings can be created even after one use. The use of cocaine can create a tolerance, requiring an increasing dose for stimulation.

There is a huge worldwide market for cocaine. The United Nations Office of Drugs and Crime estimated that in 2009 the US cocaine market was $37 billion and the West and Central European cocaine market was US$ 33 billion.

For the plant, cocaine seems to serve a valuable function as an effective insecticide, limiting damage from herbivorous insects.

Overview

The chemical structure of tropane

Cocaine is a tropane alkaloid. Tropane alkaloids are a class of alkaloids (naturally occurring chemical compounds that contain mostly basic nitrogen atoms) and secondary metabolites in which the chemical structure includes a tropane ring (nitrogenous bicyclic organic structure). Well-known alkaloids include caffeine, nicotine, morphine, theobromine, mescaline, strychnine, quinine, and codeine. Well-known tropane alkaloids, in addition to cocaine, include atropine and ecgonine (a precursor and metabolite of cocaine). Cocaine has the chemical formula C17H21NO4 and is also known as benzoylmethylecgonine or methyl benzoyl ecgonine.

Cocaine is found in coca plants, which are indigenous to South America. There are four varieties of these tropical plants that are cultivated: Erythroxylum coca var. coca (Bolivian or Huánuco coca), E. coca var. ipadu (Amazonian coca), E. novogranatense var. novogranatense (Colombian coca), and E. novogranatense var. truxillense (Trujillo coca). The name cocaine comes from the name of the coca plant plus the alkaloid suffix -ine.

Coca shrub in Colombia

Cocaine is the most concentrated of the dozen or more alkaloids that have been identified in the coca plant. Concentrations vary by variety and region, but leaves have been reported as having between 0.25% and 0.77% (Plowman and Rivier 1983), between 0.35% and 0.72% by dry weight (Nathanson et al. 1993), and between 0.3% and 1.5% and averaging 0.8% in fresh leaves (Casale and Klein 1993). In unprocessed form, coca leaves have been used for thousands of years in South America for various religious, social, medicinal, and nutritional purposes, including to control hunger and combat the impacts of high altitudes. However, since the alkaloid cocaine is present in only trace amounts in the leaves, it does not cause the euphoric and psychoactive effects associated with use of the drug.

When processed and concentrated by chemical extraction from large quantities of coca leaves, cocaine is a powerful stimulant. The extract from the leaves is hydrolysed and esterified with methanol and benzoic acid to produce the hydrochloride salt of cocaine.

Biologically, cocaine acts as a serotonin–norepinephrine–dopamine reuptake inhibitor, also known as a triple reuptake inhibitor (TRI). For example, Marieb and Hoehn (2010) note the impact of cocaine hooking up to the dopamine reuptake transporter protein, thus blocking reabsorption of dopamine. With this neurotransmitter remaining in the synapse, the post-synaptic receptor cells are stimulated again and again, allowing the body to experience over and over this reward system and associated high, along with increased heart rate, sexual appetite, and blood pressure. However, as a result, the system releases less and less dopamine and the reward system goes dry, and the cocaine user, in addition to becoming anxious, find himself or herself "in a very real sense, unable to experience pleasure without the drug." However, more cocaine just suppresses dopamine release even more.

Unlike most molecules, cocaine has pockets with both high hydrophilic and lipophilic efficiency, violating the rule of hydrophilic-lipophilic balance. This causes it to cross the blood–brain barrier far better than other psychoactive chemicals and may even induce blood-brain barrier breakdown (Sharma et al. 2009; Dietrich 2009). Marieb and Hoehn (2010) note that one way that might be developed to tackle addiction would be to prompt the immune system to bind cocaine molecules and prevent them from entering the brain.

Cocaine is best known worldwide for its illegal use as a recreational drug. This concentrated form of cocaine is used nasally (nasal insufflation is also known as "snorting," "sniffing," or "blowing" and involves absorption through the mucous membranes lining the sinuses), injected (the method that produces the highest blood levels in the shortest time), or smoked (notably the cheaper, more potent form called "crack"). It may also be administered orally (rubbed on gums). Among forms of cocaine use are cocaine hydrochloride, natural leaf, cocaine paste, or freebase.

Cocaine use can be highly addictive, causing intense cravings for the drug, and can have deleterious impacts on the brain, heart, respiratory system, kidneys, sexual system, and gastrointestinal tract (WebMD 2013a). For example, it can result in a heart attack or strokes, even in young people,and it can cause ulcers and sudden kidney failure, and it can impair sexual function (WebMD 2013a).

The possession, distribution, and sale of cocaine products is illegal for non-medicinal / non-government sanctioned purposes in virtually all parts of the world. Internationally, it is regulated by the Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs, and the United Nations Convention Against Illicit Traffic in Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances. In the United States, the manufacture, importation, possession, and distribution of cocaine is additionally regulated by the 1970 Controlled Substances Act. Cocaine is generally treated as a 'hard drug', with severe penalties for possession and trafficking.

The United Nations Office of Drugs and Crime estimated that in 2009, the US cocaine market was $37 billion (and shrinking over the past ten years) and the West and Central European Cocaine market was US$ 37 billion (and increasing over the past ten years) (USODC 2011).

The coca leaves have been used unprocessed for thousands of years in South America for various religious, social, medicinal, and nutritional purposes, including in the Andean countries to make a herbal tea with mild stimulant effects. However, since the alkaloid cocaine is present in only trace amounts in the leaves, it does not cause the euphoric and psychoactive effects associated with use of the drug. The Coca-Cola company uses a cocaine-free coca extract. In the early days of the manufacture of Coca-Cola beverage, the formulation did contain some cocaine, although within a few years of its introduction it already was only trace amounts. Cocaine is available as a prescription for such purposes as external application to the skin to numb pain.

For the plant, cocaine is believed to serve as a naturally occurring insecticide, with the alkaloid exerting such effects at concentrations normally found in the leaves (Nathanson et. al. 1993). It has been observed that compared to other tropical plants, coca seems to be relatively pest free, with little observed damage to the leaves and rare observations of herbivorous insects on plants in the field (Nathanson et al. 1993).

Medical effects

Data from The Lancet suggests cocaine is ranked both the 2nd most addictive and the 2nd most harmful of 20 popular recreational drugs.[5]

Cocaine acts in the brain on areas that acts to reward people with pleasure for behaviors important to survival individually and as a species, such as food, sex, and healthy pleasure (Marieb and Hoehn 2010; WebMD 2013a; Spanage and Weiss 1999). Involving the brain neurotransmitters in this area, it is a powerful nervous system stimulant (WHO 2004). Its effects can last from 15–30 minutes to an hour or two, depending on dosage and the route of administration (WHO 2007; WebMD 2013a). However, it can have serious negative effects on the heart, brain, lungs, and emotions, including the danger of sudden death (WebMD). It was ranked the second most addictive and harmful recreational drug (of 20 studied) by Nutt et al. (2007), exceeded only by heroin.

On the one hand, users of cocaine report a euphoria (feeling "high"), with an increased sense of alertness, feelings of well-being, competence, and "supremacy," enhanced energy and motor activity, and sexuality (WebMD 2013a).

On the other hand, some users report the high as also being accompanied with anxiety, irritability, paranoia, and restlessness, particularly during the comedown (WebMd 2013a). With excessive dosage or prolonged use, itching, tachycardia, tremors, convulsions, hallucinations, and paranoid delusions can result (WHO 2004; Zhao 2008). Overdoses cause hyperthermia (elevated body temperature) and a marked elevation of blood pressure. Cocaine constricts blood vessels, dilates the pupils, and increases heart rate and blood pressure.

In terms of the circulatory system, the increase of heart rate and blood pressure, while restricting arteries supplying blood, can result in a heart attack, even in youth without heart disease (WebMD 2013a). An abnormal heart rhythm called arrhythmia can be triggered. In terms of the brain, the constriction of blood vessels in the brain can cause strokes, even in young people without other stroke risk factors (WebMD 2013a). Cocaine can double both the risks of hemorrhagic and ischemic strokes (Jeffrey and Vega 2008) and increase the risk of other infarctions, such as myocardial infarction (Vasica and Tennant 2002). Cocaine can cause seizures. Sudden death has been known to occur, such as the case of Len Bias, considered by some as one of the greatest American college basketball athletes, who died two days after being drafted by the Boston Celtics because of a cardiac arrhythmia induced by use of cocaine.

The constriction of blood vessels supplying the gastrointestinal tract can lead to oxygen starvation and the development of ulcers or perforation of the stomach and intestines (WebMD 2013a). Cocaine use can also cause a wide array of kidney diseases and renal failure (Jaffe and Kimmel 2006; van der Woude 2000). Kidney failure can suddenly occur through a process known as rhabdomyolysis (WebMD 2013a).

Side effects of chronic cocaine use

While sexual appetite may be increased, cocaine use can impair sexual function in men and women, including impaired ejaculation in men (WebMd 2013a).

In terms of the lungs and respiratory system, physical side effects from chronic smoking of cocaine include hemoptysis, bronchospasm, pruritus, fever, diffuse alveolar infiltrates without effusions, pulmonary and systemic eosinophilia, chest pain, lung trauma, sore throat, asthma, hoarse voice, dyspnea (shortness of breath), and an aching, flu-like syndrome. Permanent lung damage can result in some users.

The experience of insatiable hunger, aches, insomnia/oversleeping, lethargy, and persistent runny nose are often described as very unpleasant. Depression with suicidal ideation may develop in very heavy users.

Chronic intranasal usage can degrade the cartilage separating the nostrils (the septum nasi), leading eventually to its complete disappearance. Due to the absorption of the cocaine from cocaine hydrochloride, the remaining hydrochloride forms a dilute hydrochloric acid (Pagliaro and Pagliaro 2004).

Cocaine may also greatly increase this risk of developing rare autoimmune or connective tissue diseases such as lupus, Goodpasture's disease, vasculitis, glomerulonephritis, Stevens–Johnson syndrome and other diseases (Trozak and Gould 1984; Peces et al. 1999; Moore and Richardson 1998).

Cocaine often is a cause of involuntary tooth grinding, known as bruxism, which can deteriorate tooth enamel and lead to gingivitis (Baigent 2003). Additionally, stimulants like cocaine, methamphetamine, and even caffeine cause dehydration and dry mouth. Since saliva is an important mechanism in maintaining one's oral pH level, chronic stimulant abusers who do not hydrate sufficiently may experience demineralization of their teeth due to the pH of the tooth surface dropping too low (below 5.5).

Cocaine hydrochloride

Chronic cocaine intake causes brain cells to adapt functionally to strong imbalances of transmitter levels in order to compensate extremes. Thus, receptors disappear from the cell surface or reappear on it, resulting more or less in an "off" or "working mode" respectively, or they change their susceptibility for binding partners (ligands) – mechanisms called down-/upregulation. Marieb and Hoehn (2010) state that the blocking of dopamine uptake by repeated use of cocaine causes the reward system to effectively go dry, as the system releases less and less dopamine, and "the cocaine user becomes anxious and, in a very real sense, unable to experience pleasure without the drug." As the postsynaptic cells sprout new receptors to pick up the dopamine signals, a vicious cycle begins where cocaine "is needed to experience pleasure, but using it suppresses dopamine release even more" (Marieb and Hoehn 2010). A loss of vesicular monoamine transporters, neurofilament proteins, and other morphological changes appear to indicate a long term damage of dopamine neurons. All these effects contribute a rise in tolerance thus requiring a larger dosage to achieve the same effect (Lowinson et al. 2004). On the other hand, a study by D'Haenen et al. (2002) suggests cocaine abusers do not show normal age-related loss of striatal dopamine transporter (DAT) sites, suggesting cocaine has neuroprotective properties for dopamine neurons.

Cocaine can often cause reduced food intake, many chronic users lose their appetite and can experience severe malnutrition and significant weight loss.

The lack of normal amounts of serotonin and dopamine in the brain is the cause of the dysphoria and depression felt after the initial high.

Cocaine is extensively metabolized, primarily in the liver, with only about 1% excreted unchanged in the urine. The metabolism is dominated by hydrolytic ester cleavage, so the eliminated metabolites consist mostly of benzoylecgonine (BE), the major metabolite, and other significant metabolites in lesser amounts such as ecgonine methyl ester (EME) and ecgonine. Further minor metabolites of cocaine include norcocaine, p-hydroxycocaine, m-hydroxycocaine, p-hydroxybenzoylecgonine (pOHBE), and m-hydroxybenzoylecgonine (Kolbrich et al. 2006).

Cocaine has been held responsible for more visits to US emergency rooms than any other illegal drug (WebMD 2013a). The amount of sudden-deaths from cocaine also is not a rare phenomenon and in one study the cause of cocaine-related sudden death was found to cardiovascular in 62% of the cases, cerebrovascular in 14%, excited delirium in 14%, respiratory in 5%, and and metabolic in 5% (Nainggolan 2010). Drs. Richard Lange and L David Hillis of the University of Texas Health Science Center note "The notion that recreational cocaine use is 'safe' should be dispelled, since even small amounts may have catastrophic consequences" (Nainggolan 2010).

Addiction

Cocaine dependence (or addiction) is psychological dependency on the regular use of cocaine. Cocaine dependency may result in physiological damage, lethargy, psychosis, depression, akathisia, and fatal overdose.

Physical withdrawal is not dangerous. Physiological changes caused by cocaine withdrawal include vivid and unpleasant dreams, insomnia or hypersomnia, increased appetite and psychomotor retardation or agitation (Lowinson et al. 2004).

Celebrities who died from cocaine-related causes

Among the notable cocaine-related deaths from cocaine have been basketball player Len Bias, baseball player Ken Caminiti, Quiet Riot singer Kevin DuBrow, The Who musician John Entwistle, actor Chris Farley (along with morphine), model Katy French, The Righteous Brothers musician Bobby Hatfield, the Pretenders musician James Honeyman-Scott, Blind Melon singer Shannon Hoon, actress/singer Whitney Houston (drowning under the influence), Grateful Dead musician Brent Mydland, actor River Phoenix (along with heroin), the Temptations musician David Ruffin, baseball player Rod Scurry, and musician Ike Turner.

Mechanism of action

Comparison of the mechanism of cocaine versus that of amphetamines. Cocaine binds directly to the DAT1 transporter, inhibiting reuptake with more efficacy than amphetamines, which phosphorylate it causing internalization. Amphetamines, primarily releasing DAT (which cocaine does not do), only inhibite reuptake as a secondary, and much more minor, mode of action than cocaine.

The human brain appears to be hardwired with a reward system that provides pleasure when humans engage in various behaviors that are important to individual or species survival, such as romantic love, sex, and food. Humans ability to feel good involves brain neurotransmitters in this reward system, including dopamine released by neurons in areas known as the ventral tegmental area (VTA), the amygdala, and the nucleus accumbens (Marieb and Hoehn 2010; Spanage and Weiss 1999).

Various drugs of abuse can subvert this reward system, one of which is cocaine. These drugs can cause an addictive pleasure flush by flooding the brain with neurotransmitter-like chemicals or causing a build-up of neurotransmitters such as dopamine. However, this short-lived pleasure also comes with some serious side-effects, including the brain making and releasing less neurotransmitters on its own.

A major effect of cocaine on the central nervous system is the blockade of the dopamine reuptake transporter protein and thus blocking the reabsorption of dopamine. Dopamine transmitter released during neural signaling is normally recycled via the transporter protein; in other words, the transporter binds the transmitter and pumps it out of the synaptic cleft back into the presynaptic neuron, where it is taken up into storage vesicles. By binding tightly with the dopamine transporter, cocaine forms a complex that blocks the transporter's function. The dopamine transporter can no longer perform its reuptake function, and thus dopamine accumulates in the synaptic cleft. This results in an enhanced and prolonged postsynaptic effect of dopaminergic signaling at dopamine receptors on the receiving neuron. In other words, by the dopamine remaining in the synapse, the post-synaptic receptor cells are triggered again and again, allowing a prolonged pleasure flush.

When the dopamine uptake is blocked by repeated use of cocaine, the system reacts by releasing less and less dopamine and "the reward system effectively goes dry" (Marieb and Hoehn 2010). In other words, prolonged exposure to cocaine leads to homeostatic dysregulation of normal dopaminergic signaling via down-regulation of dopamine receptors and enhanced signal transduction. The decreased dopaminergic signaling after chronic cocaine use may contribute to depressive mood disorders and sensitize this important brain reward circuit to the reinforcing effects of cocaine (for example, enhanced dopaminergic signaling only when cocaine is self-administered). This sensitization contributes to the intractable nature of addiction and relapse.

Dopamine-rich brain regions such as the ventral tegmental area, nucleus accumbens, and prefrontal cortex are frequent targets of cocaine addiction research. Of particular interest is the pathway consisting of dopaminergic neurons originating in the ventral tegmental area that terminate in the nucleus accumbens. This projection may function as a "reward center," in that it seems to show activation in response to drugs of abuse like cocaine in addition to natural rewards like food or sex (Spanage and Weiss 1999). While the precise role of dopamine in the subjective experience of reward is highly controversial among neuroscientists, the release of dopamine in the nucleus accumbens is widely considered to be at least partially responsible for cocaine's rewarding effects. This hypothesis is largely based on laboratory data involving rats that are trained to self-administer cocaine. If dopamine antagonists are infused directly into the nucleus accumbens, well-trained rats self-administering cocaine will initially increase responding only to stop completely, thereby indicating that cocaine is no longer reinforcing (i.e. rewarding) the drug-seeking behavior.

Cocaine also effects seratonin (5-hydroxytryptamine, 5-HT), a monoamine neurotransmitter widely thought to be a contributor to feelings of well-being and happiness. Cocaine has been shown to inhibit the re-uptake of 5-HT3. The overabundance of 5-HT3 receptors in cocaine conditioned rats display this trait; however, the exact effect of 5-HT3 in this process is unclear (Carta et al. 2003). The 5-HT2 receptor (particularly the subtypes 5-HT2AR, 5-HT2BR and 5-HT2CR) show influence in the evocation of hyperactivity displayed in cocaine use (Filip et al. 2004).

Sigma receptors are affected by cocaine, as cocaine functions as a sigma ligand agonist (NIH/NIDA 2003). Sigma receptors are proteins found in the brain (and other parts of the body). The impact of cocaine on these sigma receptions may be part of the reason for cocaine's suppression of the immune system (NIH/NIDA 2003). Another specific receptor cocaine has been demonstrated to function on is NMDA (Lluch et al. 2005).

Cocaine also blocks sodium channels, thereby interfering with the propagation of action potentials; thus, like lignocaine and novocaine, it acts as a local anesthetic. It also functions on the binding sites to the dopamine and serotonin sodium dependent transport area as targets as separate mechanisms from its reuptake of those transporters; unique to its local anesthetic value, which makes it in a class of functionality different from both its own derived phenyltropanes analogues (which have that removed) and the amphetamine class of stimulants (which as well altogether lack that). In addition to this cocaine has some target binding to the site of the Kappa-opioid receptor as well. Cocaine also causes vasoconstriction, thus reducing bleeding during minor surgical procedures. The locomotor enhancing properties of cocaine may be attributable to its enhancement of dopaminergic transmission from the substantia nigra.

The impact of the neurotransmitter glutamate is also believed to be important to maintaining addiction, as glutamate signaling seems to cause permanent brain changes that lead to "compulsive drug-seeking behavior elicited by external cues" (Marieb and Hoehn 2010). Mice lacking a particular glutamate receptor are willing to try cocaine but do not become addicted (Marieb and Hoehn 2010). These combined dopamine and glutamate systems are so strong that years later, certain setting can create intense cravings for cocaine (Marieb and Hoehn 2010).

Because nicotine increases the levels of dopamine in the brain, many cocaine users find that consumption of tobacco products during cocaine use enhances the euphoria. This, however, may have undesirable consequences, such as uncontrollable chain smoking during cocaine use (even users who do not normally smoke cigarettes have been known to chain smoke when using cocaine), in addition to the detrimental health effects and the additional strain on the cardiovascular system caused by tobacco.

Forms

A pile of cocaine hydrochloride
A piece of compressed cocaine powder

Cocaine in its purest form is a white, pearly product. Cocaine appearing in powder form is a salt, typically cocaine hydrochloride. Street market cocaine is frequently adulterated or “cut” with various powdery fillers to increase its weight; the substances most commonly used in this process are baking soda; sugars, such as lactose, dextrose, inositol, and mannitol; and local anesthetics, such as lidocaine or benzocaine, which mimic or add to cocaine's numbing effect on mucous membranes. Cocaine may also be "cut" with other stimulants such as methamphetamine. Adulterated cocaine is often a white, off-white or pinkish powder.

Salts. Cocaine is a weakly alkaline compound (an "alkaloid") and can therefore combine with acidic compounds to form various salts. The hydrochloride (HCl) salt of cocaine is by far the most commonly encountered, although the sulfate (-SO4) and the nitrate (-NO3) are occasionally seen. Different salts dissolve to a greater or lesser extent in various solvents. The hydrochloride salt is polar in character and is quite soluble in water. Powdered cocaine is commonly known as "coke" or "blow" and users can snort the powder (inhale through the nose) and into the bloodstream, or dissolve in water and inject directly into the bloodstream.

Basic. As the name implies, “freebase” or "free base" is the base form of cocaine, as opposed to the salt form. It is practically insoluble in water whereas hydrochloride salt is water soluble. (Most alkaloids are unstable in their pure form and exist in ionic salt form. The salts usually exhibit greater water solubility. Common counterions include chloride, bromide, acetate and oxalate. Because of the ubiquity of chloride salts, formed from the reaction of the amine with hydrochloric acid, these amine derivatives are known as the hydrochlorides.) Pure cocaine is prepared by neutralizing its compounding salt with an alkaline solution, which will precipitate to non-polar basic cocaine. It is further refined through aqueous-solvent Liquid-liquid extraction.

The term "freebasing" means converting an ionic form into free base. It can refer to deprotonating the hydrochloride salt form of cocaine to free base form. The free base is preferred for smoking. Smoking freebase cocaine has the additional effect of releasing methylecgonidine into the user's system due to the pyrolysis of the substance (a side effect which insufflating or injecting powder cocaine does not create). Some research suggests that smoking freebase cocaine can be even more cardiotoxic than other routes of administration (Scheidweiler et al. 2003; Yang et al. 2001; Fandiño et al. 2002).

A woman smoking crack cocaine

Crack cocaine. Crack is a lower purity form of free-base cocaine that is usually produced by neutralization of cocaine hydrochloride with a solution of baking soda (sodium bicarbonate, NaHCO3) and water, producing a very hard/brittle, off-white-to-brown colored, amorphous material that contains sodium carbonate, entrapped water, and other by-products as the main impurities. The color of “crack” cocaine depends upon several factors including the origin of the cocaine used, the method of preparation—with ammonia or baking soda—and the presence of impurities, but will generally range from white to a yellowish cream to a light brown. Its texture will also depend on the adulterants, origin and processing of the powdered cocaine, and the method of converting the base. It ranges from a crumbly texture, sometimes extremely oily, to a hard, almost crystalline nature.

The "freebase" and "crack" forms of cocaine are usually administered by vaporization of the powdered substance into smoke, which is then inhaled. The origin of the name "crack" comes from the "crackling" sound (and hence the onomatopoeic moniker “crack”) that is produced when the cocaine and its impurities (i.e. water, sodium bicarbonate) are heated past the point of vaporization (Nelson 1998). Pure cocaine base/crack can be smoked because it vaporizes smoothly, with little or no decomposition at 98 °C (208 °F) (Miller et al. 2009), which is below the boiling point of water. In contrast, cocaine hydrochloride does not vaporize until heated to a much higher temperature (about 197°C), and considerable decomposition/burning occurs at these high temperatures. This effectively destroys some of the cocaine, and yields a sharp, acrid, and foul-tasting smoke.

Unprocessed coca leaf. Coca leaves have been used unprocessed for thousands of years in South America for various religious, social, medicinal, and nutritional purposes, including to control hunger and combat the impacts of high altitudes. Chewing of unadulterated coca leaves has been a tradition in the Andes for thousands of years and remains practiced by millions in South America today (Cortes 2013). Individuals may suck on wads of the leaves and keep them in their cheeks for hours at a time, often combining with chalk or ask to help dissolve the alkaloids into the saliva (Boucher 1991). Unprocessed coca leaves are also commonly used in the Andean countries to make a herbal tea with mild stimulant effects. However, since the alkaloid cocaine is present in only trace amounts in the leaves, it does not cause the euphoric and psychoactive effects associated with use of the drug. (See the article coca.)

Routes of administration

Cocaine powder can be inhaled through the nose or dissolved in water and injected into the bloodstream, as well as rubbed along the gum line. The freebase form can be smoked. Cocaine can also be applied to the skin as an topical anesthetic. Coca leaf can be chewed and brewed into a tea. Injecting and smoking leads to faster absorption into the bloodstream than snorting and a quicker, stronger high, but faster absorption also tends to mean a shorter duration of the high (5-10 minutes for smoking versus 15-30 minutes for snorting)(Botany Central 2013).

A man sniffing cocaine

Insufflation ("snorting," "sniffing," or "blowing") involves breathing in the powder through the nose and in that manner absorption into the bloodstream. Prior to insufflation, cocaine powder is divided into very fine particles. Rolled up banknotes, hollowed-out pens, cut straws, and other such items are often used to insufflate cocaine. Upon snorting, the drug coats and is absorbed through the mucous membranes lining the sinuses. Any material not directly absorbed through the mucous membranes is collected in mucus and swallowed. When insufflating cocaine, absorption through the nasal membranes is approximately 30–60%, with higher doses leading to increased absorption efficiency.

Nasal insufflation is the most common method of ingestion of recreational powdered cocaine in the Western world. In a study of cocaine users, the average time taken to reach peak subjective effects was 14.6 minutes (Volkow et al. 2000). Physiological and psychotropic effects from nasally insufflated cocaine are sustained for approximately 40–60 minutes after the peak effects are attained (Barnett et al. 1981). Snorting involves slower absorption into the bloodstream; however, as with other means of administration sudden death remains a risk, as with the other medical complications, including potential damage to the inside of the nose due to cocaine highly constricting blood vessels and therefore blood and oxygen/nutrient flow to that area. In addition, a study by Bonkovsky and Mehta (2001) reported that, just like shared needles, the sharing of straws used to "snort" cocaine can spread blood diseases such as hepatitis C.

Injection. Injection, involving administering the drug directly to the bloodstream by the use of needles, provides the highest blood levels of drug in the shortest amount of time. Volkow et al. (2000) found that the average time taken to reach peak subjective effects was 3.1 minutes. The euphoria passes quickly. Aside from the toxic effects of cocaine, there is also danger of circulatory emboli from the insoluble substances that may be used to cut the drug. Subjective effects not commonly shared with other methods of administration include a ringing in the ears moments after injection (usually when in excess of 120 milligrams) lasting 2 to 5 minutes, including tinnitus & audio distortion. As with all injected illicit substances, there is a risk of the user contracting blood-borne infections if sterile injecting equipment is not available or used. Additionally, because cocaine is a vasoconstrictor, and usage often entails multiple injections within several hours or less, subsequent injections are progressively more difficult to administer, which in turn may lead to more injection attempts and more sequelae from improperly performed injection. An injected mixture of cocaine and heroin, known as “speedball,” is a particularly dangerous combination, as the converse effects of the drugs actually complement each other, but may also mask the symptoms of an overdose. It has been responsible for numerous deaths, including celebrities such as John Belushi, Chris Farley, Mitch Hedberg, River Phoenix and Layne Staley.

A spoon containing baking soda, cocaine, and a small amount of water. Used in a "poor-man's" crack-cocaine production

Inhalation. Inhalation or smoking involves inhaling cocaine vapor into the lungs by sublimating solid cocaine by heating. Smoking freebase or crack cocaine is most often accomplished using a pipe made from a small glass tube, often taken from "love roses," small glass tubes with a paper rose that are promoted as romantic gifts (Reist 2005). A small piece of clean heavy copper or occasionally stainless steel scouring pad may serve as a reduction base and flow modulator in which the "rock" can be melted and boiled to vapor. Crack often is smoked by placing it at the end of the pipe; a flame held close to it produces vapor, which is then inhaled by the smoker. Powdered cocaine is also sometimes smoked, though heat destroys much of the chemical. Smoking or vaporizing cocaine and inhaling it into the lungs produces an almost immediate "high" that can be very intense quite rapidly. In a Brookhaven National Laboratory medical department study, based on self reports of cocaine abusers who participated in the study, "peak high" was found at mean of 1.4min +/- 0.5 minutes (Volkow et al. 2000). While the stimulating effects may last for hours, the euphoric sensation is very brief—usually 5 to 15 minutes—prompting the user to smoke more immediately.

Application to skin. Many users rub the powder along the gum line, or onto a cigarette filter, which is then smoked, numbing the gums and teeth—hence, the colloquial names of "numbies", "gummers" or "cocoa puffs" for this type of administration. This is mostly done with the small amounts of cocaine remaining on a surface after insufflation. A medical form of cocaine, strictly regulated and available by prescription, is applied to the skin to numb eye, nose, and throat pain (WebMD 2013b).

Oral: Coca leaf chewing and infusions (tea). Unadulterated coca leaves have been chewed for thousands of years in the Andes and remains practiced by millions in South America today (Cortes 2013). Individuals may suck on wads of the leaves and keep them in their cheeks for hours at a time. Coca leaves are typically mixed with an alkaline substance (such as lime) to help dissolve the alkaloids into the saliva and chewed into a wad that is retained in the mouth between gum and cheek (much in the same as chewing tobacco is chewed) and sucked of its juices. The juices are absorbed slowly by the mucous membrane of the inner cheek and by the gastrointestinal tract when swallowed. While the cocaine in the plant has little effect on the unbroken skin, it does act on the mucous membranes of the mouth (as well as the membranes of the eye, nose, and stomach) (Royal Botanic Gardens 1985). However, since the alkaloid cocaine is only in trace amounts in the leaves, it does not cause the euphoric and psychoactive effects associated with use of the concentrated drug. Concentrations vary by variety and region, but leaves have been reported variously as between 0.25% and 0.77% (Plowman and Rivier 1983), between 0.35% and 0.72% by dry weight (Nathanson et al. 1993), and between 0.3% and 1.5% and averaging 0.8% in fresh leaves (Casale and Klein 1993).

Coca leaves also can be boiled to provide a tea. Although coca leaf chewing is common mainly among the indigenous populations, the consumption of coca tea (Mate de coca) is common among all sectors of society in the Andean countries.

Because cocaine is hydrolyzed and rendered inactive in the acidic stomach, it is not readily absorbed when ingested alone. Only when mixed with a highly alkaline substance (such as lime) can it be absorbed into the bloodstream through the stomach. The efficiency of absorption of orally administered cocaine is limited by two additional factors. First, the drug is partly catabolized by the liver. Second, capillaries in the mouth and esophagus constrict after contact with the drug, reducing the surface area over which the drug can be absorbed. Nevertheless, cocaine metabolites can be detected in the urine of subjects that have sipped even one cup of coca leaf infusion. Therefore, this is an actual additional form of administration of cocaine, albeit an inefficient one.

Other methods. An oral method for the psychoactive drug is to wrap up some cocaine in rolling paper and swallow (parachute) it. Little research has been focused on another method: the suppository (anal or vaginal insertion) method of administration, also known as "plugging." This method of administration is commonly administered using an oral syringe. Cocaine can be dissolved in water and withdrawn into an oral syringe which may then be lubricated and inserted into the anus or vagina before the plunger is pushed. The rectum and the vaginal canal is where the majority of the drug would likely be taken up, through the membranes lining its walls.

Uses

Recreational psychoactive drug

Washington, D.C. Mayor Marion Barry captured on a surveillance camera smoking crack cocaine during a sting operation by the FBI and D.C. Police.

Cocaine is best known worldwide for its illegal use as a recreational psychoactive drug. As noted above, this concentrated form of cocaine particularly is used nasally (nasal insufflation is also known as "snorting," "sniffing," or "blowing"), injected, or smoked. In the United States, the development of "crack" cocaine introduced the substance to a generally poorer inner-city market.

The United Nations Office of Drugs and Crime estimated that in 2009, the US cocaine market was $37 billion (and shrinking over the past ten years) and the West and Central European Cocaine market was US$ 33 billion (and increasing over the past ten years) (USODC 2011). According to a 2007 United Nations report, Spain is the country with the highest rate of cocaine usage (3.0% of adults in the previous year) (UNODC 2007). Other countries where the usage rate meets or exceeds 1.5% are the United States (2.8%), England and Wales (2.4%), Canada (2.3%), Italy (2.1%), Bolivia (1.9%), Chile (1.8%), and Scotland (1.5%) (UNODC 2007).

The production, distribution and sale of cocaine products is restricted and/or illegal in most countries. Internationally, it is regulated by the Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs, and the United Nations Convention Against Illicit Traffic in Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances. In the United States, the manufacture, importation, possession, and distribution of cocaine is additionally regulated by the 1970 Controlled Substances Act. Cocaine is generally treated as a 'hard drug', with severe penalties for possession and trafficking.

Medicine

"Cocaine toothache drops", 1885 advertisement of cocaine for dental pain in children

Strictly regulated, cocaine can be applied externally to the skin to numb pain. Cocaine was historically used as a topical anesthetic in eye and nasal surgery. It is now predominantly used for nasal and lacrimal duct surgery. The major disadvantages of this use are cocaine's intense vasoconstrictor activity and potential for cardiovascular toxicity. Cocaine has since been largely replaced in Western medicine by synthetic local anesthetics such as benzocaine, proparacaine, lignocaine/xylocaine/lidocaine, and tetracaine though it remains available for use if specified. If vasoconstriction is desired for a procedure (as it reduces bleeding), the anesthetic is combined with a vasoconstrictor such as phenylephrine or epinephrine.

In Australia, cocaine is currently prescribed for use as a local anesthetic for conditions such as mouth and lung ulcers. Some ENT specialists occasionally use cocaine within the practice when performing procedures such as nasal cauterization. In this scenario dissolved cocaine is soaked into a ball of cotton wool, which is placed in the nostril for the 10–15 minutes immediately prior to the procedure, thus performing the dual role of both numbing the area to be cauterized, and vasoconstriction. Even when used this way, some of the used cocaine may be absorbed through oral or nasal mucosa and give systemic effects.

In the United States, cocaine remains an FDA-approved Schedule C-II drug, which can be prescribed by a healthcare provider, but is strictly regulated. A form of cocaine available by prescription is applied to the skin to numb eye, nose, and throat pain and narrow blood vessels (WebMD 2013b).

Unprocessed coca leaf traditionally has been used for a variety of medical purposes, including as a stimulant to overcome fatigue, hunger, and thirst. Because coca constricts blood vessels, it also serves to oppose bleeding, and coca seeds were used for nosebleeds. Coca leaf also has been used to overcome altitude sickness, and in the Andes tourists have been offered coca tea for this purpose (Cortes 2013). In addition, coca extracts have been used as a muscle and cerebral stimulant to alleviate nausea, vomiting, and stomach pains without upsetting digestion (Botany Central 2013; WebMD 2013b). (See the article coca for these and other uses of the coca leaf.)

In the United States, a Stepan Company plant in Maywood, New Jersey manufactures pure cocaine for medical use and also produces a cocaine-free extract of the coca leaf, which is used as a flavoring ingredient in Coca-Cola. Other companies have registrations with the DEA to import coca leaf according to 2011 Federal Register Notices for Importers (ODC 2011), including Johnson Matthey, Inc, Pharmaceutical Materials; Mallinckrodt Inc; Penick Corporation; and the Research Triangle Institute.

History

Coca leaf in Bolivia

Coca, the plant in which cocaine is found, has been utilized in unprocessed form for thousands of years. There is archeological evidence that suggests the use of coca leaves 8000 years ago, with the finding of coca leaves of that date (6000 B.C.E.) in floors in Peru, along with pieces of calcite (calcium carbonate), which is used by those chewing leaves to bring out the alkaloids by helping dissolve them into the saliva (Dillehay et al. 2010; Boucher 1991). Coca leaves also have been found in the Huaca Prieta settlement in northern Peru, dated from about 2500 to 1800 B.C.E. (Botany Central 2013; Hurtado 1995). Traces of cocaine also have been in 3000-year-old mummies of the Alto Ramirez culture of Northern Chile, suggesting coca-leaf chewing dates to at least 1500 B.C.E. (Rivera et al. 2005). The remains of coca leaves not only have been found with ancient Peruvian mummies, but pottery from the time period depicts humans with bulged cheeks, indicating the presence of something on which they are chewing (Altman et al. 1985). It is the view of Boucher (1991) that the coca plant was domesticated by 1500 B.C.E. (See coca for more detail on the history of coca.)

The cocaine alkaloid was first isolated by the German chemist Friedrich Gaedcke in 1855. Gaedcke named the alkaloid "erythroxyline" and published a description in the journal Archiv der Pharmazie (Gaedcke 1855).

Cocaine also was isolated in 1859 by Albert Niemann of the University of Göttingen, using an improved purification process. Essentially, three years earlier, in 1856, Friedrich Wöhler asked Dr. Carl Scherzer, a scientist aboard the Novara (an Austrian frigate sent by Emperor Franz Joseph to circle the globe), to bring him a large amount of coca leaves from South America. In 1859, the ship finished its travels and Wöhler received a trunk full of coca. Wöhler passed on the leaves to Albert Niemann, a Ph.D. student at the University of Göttingen in Germany, who then developed the improved process (Niemann 1860).

Niemann described every step he took to isolate cocaine in his dissertation titled Über eine neue organische Base in den Cocablättern (On a New Organic Base in the Coca Leaves), which was published in 1860—it earned him his Ph.D. and is now in the British Library. He wrote of the alkaloid's "colourless transparent prisms" and said that, "Its solutions have an alkaline reaction, a bitter taste, promote the flow of saliva and leave a peculiar numbness, followed by a sense of cold when applied to the tongue."

It was Niemann who named the alkaloid "cocaine," from "coca" (from Quechua "cuca") + suffix "ine" (Niemann 1860). Because of its use as a local anesthetic, a suffix "-caine" was later extracted and used to form names of synthetic local anesthetics.

In 1859, an Italian doctor, Paolo Mantegazza, returned from Peru, where he had witnessed first hand the use of coca by the natives. He proceeded to experiment on himself and upon his return to Milan he wrote a paper in which he described the effects. In this paper he declared coca and cocaine (at the time they were assumed to be the same) as being useful medicinally, in the treatment of "a furred tongue in the morning, flatulence, and whitening of the teeth."

Pope Leo XIII, head of the Catholic Church from 1878 to 1903, was purported to carry a hipflask of the Vin Mariani with him and awarded a Vatican gold medal to Mariani.[6]

A chemist named Angelo Mariani who read Mantegazza's paper became immediately intrigued with coca and its economic potential. In 1863, Mariani started marketing a wine called Vin Mariani, which had been treated with coca leaves, to become cocawine. The ethanol in wine acted as a solvent and extracted the cocaine from the coca leaves, altering the drink's effect. It contained 6 mg cocaine per ounce of wine, but Vin Mariani that was to be exported contained 7.2 mg per ounce, to compete with the higher cocaine content of similar drinks in the United States.

Coca wine (of which Vin Mariani was the best-known brand) and other coca-containing preparations were widely sold as patent medicines and tonics, with claims of a wide variety of health benefits. The original version of Coca-Cola was among these, although the amount in Coca-Cola may have been only trace amounts. Pemberton's original 1886 recipe for Coca-Cola noted a "pinch of coca leaves." By 1891, just five years later, the amount of cocaine was significantly cut, although the ingredient was left in in order to protect the trade name of Coca-Cola. By 1902, it was held that Coca-Cola contained a little as 1/400th of a grain of cocaine per ounce of syrup. In 1929, Coca-Cola became cocaine-free, but before then it was estimated that the amount of cocaine already was no more than one part in 50 million (Mikkelson 2011; Liebowitz 1983; Cortes 2013).

In 1879, cocaine began to be used to treat morphine addiction.

Also in 1879, Vassili von Anrep, of the University of Würzburg devised an experiment to demonstrate the analgesic properties of the newly discovered alkaloid. He prepared two separate jars, one containing a cocaine-salt solution and the other containing merely salt water. He then submerged a frog's legs into the two jars, one leg in the treatment and one in the control solution, and proceeded to stimulate the legs in several different ways. The leg that had been immersed in the cocaine solution reacted very differently from the leg that had been immersed in salt water (Yentis and Vlassakov 1999).

Karl Koller experimented with cocaine for ophthalmic usage. In an infamous experiment in 1884, he experimented upon himself by applying a cocaine solution to his own eye and then pricking it with pins. His findings were presented to the Heidelberg Ophthalmological Society. Also in 1884, Jellinek demonstrated the effects of cocaine as a respiratory system anesthetic.

Cocaine was introduced into clinical use as a local anesthetic in Germany in 1884, about the same time as Sigmund Freud published his work Über Coca, in which he wrote that cocaine causes:

Exhilaration and lasting euphoria, which in no way differs from the normal euphoria of the healthy person. You perceive an increase of self-control and possess more vitality and capacity for work. In other words, you are simply normal, and it is soon hard to believe you are under the influence of any drug. Long intensive physical work is performed without any fatigue. This result is enjoyed without any of the unpleasant after-effects that follow exhilaration brought about by alcohol. Absolutely no craving for the further use of cocaine appears after the first, or even after repeated taking of the drug.

In 1885, William Halsted demonstrated nerve-block anesthesia (Halsted 1885), and James Leonard Corning demonstrated peridural anesthesia (Corning 1885).

In 1885, the U.S. manufacturer Parke-Davis sold cocaine in various forms, including cigarettes, powder, and even a cocaine mixture that could be injected directly into the user's veins with the included needle. The company promised that its cocaine products would "supply the place of food, make the coward brave, the silent eloquent and render the sufferer insensitive to pain."

In 1898, Heinrich Quincke demonstrated the use of cocaine for spinal anesthesia.

The first synthesis and elucidation of the structure of the cocaine molecule was by Richard Willstätter in 1898 (Humphrey and O'Hagan 2001). The synthesis started from tropinone, a related natural product and took five steps.

Prostitutes buy cocaine capsules from a drug dealer in Berlin, 1924

In the early 20th century, products with cocaine became illegal in most countries outside of South America, after the addictive nature of cocaine was widely recognized.

In the United States, the federal government instituted a national labeling requirement for cocaine and cocaine-containing products through the Food and Drug Act of 1906. The next impactful federal regulation was the Harrison Narcotics Tax Act of 1914. While this act is often seen as the start of prohibition, the act itself was not actually a prohibition on cocaine, but instead setup a regulatory and licensing regime. The Harrison Act left manufacturers of cocaine untouched so long as they met certain purity and labeling standards.Despite that cocaine was typically illegal to sell and legal outlets were more rare, the quantities of legal cocaine produced declined very little. Legal cocaine quantities did not decrease until the Jones-Miller Act of 1922 put serious restrictions on cocaine manufactures (Madge 2001; Gootenberg 1999).

As of 2012, Peru was the leading producer of pure cocaine, followed by Bolivia and Colombia. Colombia had been the leading producer for over a decade, producing three-quarters of the world's annual yield, but the U.S. launched at $7.5 billion effort in 1999 toward helping the Colombia government crack down on drug organizations and insurgencies. Peru had been the leading producer in the 1980s and 1990s (NBC 2012).

Notes

  1. 1.0 1.1 K. Fattinger, N. L. Benowitz, R. T. Jones, and D. Verotta, "Nasal Mucosal Versus Gastrointestinal Absorption of Nasally Administered Cocaine," Eur. J. Clin. Pharmacol. 56, iss. 4(2000): 305–10. PMID 10954344.
  2. G. Barnett, R. Hawks, and R. Resnick, "Cocaine Pharmacokinetics in Humans," J Ethnopharmacol 3, issue 2–3(1981): 353–66. PMID 7242115.
  3. A. R. Jeffcoat, M. Perez-Reyes, J. M. Hill, B. M. Sadler, and C. E. Cook, "Cocaine Disposition in Humans After Intravenous Injection, Nasal Insufflation (Snorting), or Smoking," Drug Metab. Dispos. 17, iss. 2(1989): 153–9. PMID 2565204.
  4. P. Wilkinson, C. Van Dyke, P. Jatlow, P. Barash, and R. Byck, "Intranasal and Oral Cocaine Kinetics," Clin. Pharmacol. Ther. 27, iss. 3(1980): 386–94. PMID 7357795.
  5. D. Nutt, L. A. King, W. Saulsbury, and C. Blakemore, "Development of a Rational Scale to Assess the Harm of Drugs of Potential Misuse". The Lancet 369, iss. 9566 (2007): 1047–1053. Retrieved September 3, 2013
  6. Vin Mariani Winery, "Experience Vin Mariani Today," Cocanaturally.com. Retrieved September 11, 2013.


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