Cocaine | Highly Potent Substance

Cocaine may be a highly addictive drug that ups your levels of alertness, attention, and energy. The most common forms are crack, powder, liquid cocaine and infused papers. You’ll hear it called a stimulant. It’s made up of the coca plant, which is native to South America. It’s illegal within the U.S. Other names for it include:

  • Coke
  • Snow
  • Rock
  • Blow
  • Crack

Cocaine(Crack cocaine)

Cocaine Effects:

Short-Term Effects:

Short-term health effects include:

  • extreme happiness and energy
  • mental alertness
  • hypersensitivity to sight, sound, and touch
  • irritability
  • paranoia—extreme and unreasonable distrust of others

Long-Term Effects:

Some long-term health effects of liquid cocaine depend upon the tactic of use and include the following:

  • snorting: damage of smell, nosebleeds, frequent runny nose, and problems with swallowing
  • smoking: cough, asthma, respiratory distress, and a better risk of infections like pneumonia
  • using by mouth: rigorous bowel decay from reduced blood flow
  • needle injection: higher risk for contracting HIV, hepatitis C, and other blood-borne diseases, skin or soft tissue infections, also as scarring or collapsed veins

Cocaine Withdrawal:

Cocaine withdrawal occurs when someone who has used tons of cuts down or quits taking the drug. Symptoms of withdrawal can occur albeit the user isn’t completely off liquid cocaine and still has a number of the drugs in their blood. It produces a way of euphoria (extreme mood elevation) by causing the brain to release above-normal amounts of some chemicals.

But, it’s effects on other parts of the body are often very serious, or maybe deadly. When the use of it is stopped or when a binge ends, a crash follows almost directly. The user features a strong-looking for more liquid cocaine during a crash. Other symptoms include fatigue, lack of delight, anxiety, irritability, sleepiness, and sometimes agitation or extreme suspicion or paranoia.

How addictive is Cocaine:

As with other drugs, repeated use of it can cause long-term changes within the brain’s reward circuit and other brain systems, which can cause addiction. The reward circuit eventually adapts to the additional dopamine caused by the drug, becoming steadily less sensitive thereto. As a result, people take stronger and more frequent doses to feel the equivalent high they did initially and to get relief from alienation.

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