Cocaine Use Disorder
En Español (Spanish Version)Cocaine use disorder is when the use of cocaine harms a person’s health or social functioning, or when a person becomes dependent on cocaine. The powdered form of cocaine can be snorted or dissolved in water and injected. “Crack,” which is cocaine in a rock crystal form, can be heated and its vapors smoked.
Cocaine use disorder is treatable. But, it takes perseverance and determination. Talk to your doctor if you think you have this condition.
Cocaine stimulates the brain to release large amounts of the hormone dopamine. Dopamine results in the euphoria commonly reported by cocaine abusers. As a person continues to use cocaine, a tolerance is developed. This means that higher doses and more frequent use are required to maintain the euphoria.
Release of Dopamine in the Brain
The dopamine connecting to the receptors causes a euphoric feeling. This occurs naturally, but cocaine causes an exaggerated response that can lead to addiction.
© 2011 Nucleus Medical Media, Inc.
When a cocaine user stops using abruptly, he experiences a crash or withdrawal. This results in an extremely strong craving for more cocaine. It also results in fatigue (being tired), loss of pleasure in life,
depression
,
anxiety
, irritability, and sometimes paranoia. These withdrawal symptoms often prompt the user to seek more cocaine.
The following factors increase your chances of developing cocaine use disorder. If you have any of these risk factors, tell your doctor:
The symptoms below are associated with cocaine use disorder.
-
Short-term effects include:
- Euphoria
- Increase in energy
- Excessive talking
- Being mentally alert
- Decreased need for food and sleep
- Dilated pupils
- Increased temperature
- Increased heart rate
- Increased blood pressure
- Bizarre, erratic, or violent behavior
- Vertigo
- Muscle twitches
- Paranoia
-
Restlessness, irritability, and
anxiety
- Heart attack
- Seizures
- Sudden death
-
Long-term effects include:
- Uncontrollable or unpredictable cravings
- Increased tolerance
- Increased dosing
- Use of cocaine in a binge
- Increasing irritability, restlessness, and paranoia
- Full-blown paranoid psychosis
- Auditory hallucinations
-
Medical complications include:
- Heart rhythm abnormalities
- Heart attack
- Chest pain
- Respiratory failure
- Stroke
- Seizure
- Headache
- Abdominal pain
- Nausea
Your doctor will ask about your symptoms and medical history. He will also do a physical exam. The doctor will ask specific questions about your cocaine use, like how long you have been using the drug and how often.
Talk with your doctor about the best treatment plan for you. Treatment programs may be inpatient or outpatient and may:
- Require that you have already stopped using cocaine
- Involve a detoxification program
Treatment with medicine centers on the symptoms of euphoria and craving. But, there are currently no medicines to specifically treat cocaine use disorder. Medicines that have shown some promise include:
Behavioral therapies to help people quit using cocaine are often the only available, effective treatment for cocaine use disorder. Therapies include contingency management. With this program, people receive positive rewards for staying in treatment and remaining cocaine-free. Also,
cognitive behavioral therapy
helps people to learn how to abstain and remain abstinent from cocaine.
In rehab programs, people with cocaine use disorder stay in a controlled environment for 6-12 months. During this time, they may receive vocational rehab and other support to prepare them to return to society.
The best way to prevent cocaine use disorder is to never use cocaine. It is highly addictive.
National Institute on Drug Abuse
Native Alcohol and Drug Abuse Counseling Association of Nova Scotia
Carson-DeWitt R, ed.
Encyclopedia of Drugs, Alcohol, and Addictive Behavior
.
2nd ed. New York, NY: MacMillan Reference Books; 2000.
Karila L, Reynaud M. Therapeutic approaches to cocaine addiction. [article in French]
Rev Prat.
2009;59(6):830-834.
Last Reviewed March 2011