What
is Cocaine?
Cocaine
is a powerfully addictive stimulant that directly affects the brain.
Cocaine has been labeled the drug of the 1980s and '90s, because of
its extensive popularity and use during this period. However, cocaine
is not a new drug. In fact, it is one of the oldest known drugs. The
pure chemical, cocaine hydrochloride, has been an abused substance
for more than 100 years, and coca leaves, the source of cocaine, have
been ingested for thousands of years.
Pure
cocaine was first extracted from the leaf of the Erythroxylon coca
bush, which grows primarily in Peru and Bolivia, in the mid-19th century.
In the early 1900s, it became the main stimulant drug used in most
of the tonics/elixirs that were developed to treat a wide variety
of illnesses. Today, cocaine is a Schedule II drug, meaning that it
has high potential for abuse, but can be administered by a doctor
for legitimate medical uses, such as a local anesthetic for some eye,
ear, and throat surgeries.
There
are basically two chemical forms of cocaine: the hydrochloride salt
and the "freebase." The hydrochloride salt, or powdered form of cocaine,
dissolves in water and, when abused, can be taken intravenously (by
vein) or intranasally (in the nose). Freebase refers to a compound
that has not been neutralized by an acid to make the hydrochloride
salt. The freebase form of cocaine is smokable.
Cocaine
is generally sold on the street as a fine, white, crystalline powder,
known as "coke," "C," "snow," "flake," or "blow." Street dealers generally
dilute it with such inert substances as cornstarch, talcum powder,
and/or sugar, or with such active drugs as procaine (a chemically-related
local anesthetic) or with such other stimulants as amphetamines.
What
is crack?
Crack
is the street name given to the freebase form of cocaine that has
been processed from the powdered cocaine hydrochloride form to a smokable
substance. The term "crack" refers to the crackling sound heard when
the mixture is smoked. Crack cocaine is processed with ammonia or
sodium bicarbonate (baking soda) and water, and heated to remove the
hydrochloride.
Because
crack is smoked, the user experiences a high in less than 10 seconds.
This rather immediate and euphoric effect is one of the reasons that
crack became enormously popular in the mid 1980s. Another reason is
that crack is inexpensive both to produce and to buy.
