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Stimulants: Cocaine & Amphetamine Chapter 6 Cocaine Coke, Dust, Snow, Flake, Blow, Girl History of Cocaine Dates back 5000 years in Peru & Bolivia Coca leaves (2% cocaine) chewed by Incas Mid to late 1850s, active ingredient of coca plant extracted by Alfred Nieman History of Cocaine Popularized in 1880s Sherlock Holmes (IV cocaine user) Gave him energy & increased powers of deductive reasoning Sigmund Freud advocated cocaine for depression, indigestion, asthma, various neuroses, drug addiction & local anesthetic History of Cocaine Prescribed to morphine addicts & alcoholics Available in patent medicines Mariani's Coca Wine, mixture of red wine & cocaine made by Angelo Mariani received gold medal from Pope (cited as benefactor of humanity) In U.S. John Pemberton & French Wine Cola Ideal Nerve & Tonic mixture of coca leaf & kola nut (caffeine) Coca Cola History of Cocaine In 1906, as many cocaine users in US as in ’76 with only half the population 1906 Food and Drug Act Eliminated cocaine from patent medicines & soft drinks 1903 Coca Cola decocainized Coke Harrison Narcotic Act of 1914 Further limited cocaine use & drove up prices History of Cocaine Use also declined in popularity because of public sentiment against drug By 1930s, cocaine pretty much disappeared, but was replaced by amphetamine. By the late 1970s, coke began a comeback and use levels exploded around 1985….crack Cocaine: Forms Coca leaf – < 2% cocaine Cocaine HCL – Powder Freebase – Paste Crack – Rock cocaine Amphetamine: A Brief History • 1930s U.S. – benzedrine marketed for treatment of asthma, narcolepsy, depression, appetite suppression (bennies) • Also used to keep soldiers alert during combat in WWII • After war, prescribed for fatigue and appetite suppression • Social problems began in 1940s -1950s • Problems continued – particularly students, truck drivers, athletes, businessmen – 75 cents for 1000 tablets in 60s • 1965 – FDA given authority to regulate manufacturing and distribution • But so easily made by amateur chemists, did not work • 1970s – still available, but from illegal manufacturers • 1970s – $5-$10 for 100 tablets – widely used and readily available • Use declined in 1970s and 1980s but now back up – and primarily methamphetamine that is smoked, snorted, injected or taken orally – ice, crank, crystal, speed, meth, chalk Amphetamine: Forms Psychostimulant that produces effects in CNS and PNS. It is more potent in CNS. d-amphetamine l-amphetamine methamphetamine Methamphetamine is more potent than d-amphetamine, which is more potent than lamphetamine d-amphetamine used as a prescription medication for ADHD, narcolepsy, and shortterm treatment of obesity “Ice” or “Crank” Pure dmethylamphetamine HCL can be smoked because of purity Started in the West moved east over time Labs all over Duplin Co. Very dangerous to synthesize Routes of Administration Oral Intranasally - decent route for cocaine amphetamine good absorption cocaine not well absorbed (In the Andes, mixed with ashes) However, causes blood vessels to constrict, which limits absorption. intranasal works for amphetamine, but painful Intravenous - both very effective via this route Duration of Action Duration of Action Cocaine - oral onset in 2-3 min with peak in 15-20 min duration less than 1 hr IV or smoked - onset in 10 sec & peak in 5-10 min Amphetamine - oral effects after 30 min & peak in 2-3 hrs duration 10-12 hrs IV or smoked - onset 5 min & lasts up to 7 hrs Actions of cocaine Fowler et al. (2001) Action of Meth Smoked vs. Oral Amphetamine Hours Cocaine and Neurotransmission Primary effect on DA & NE with some 5HT influence Block reuptake Inhibit MAO Amphetamine and Neurotransmission Stimulates release of DA and NE Blocks reuptake of DA and NE Biotransformation & Excretion Drugs have different routes of biotransformation cocaine broken down in bloodstream amphetamine broken down in liver Both are excreted by the kidneys Physiological & Psychological Effects Cocaine & amphetamine indistinguishable to IV users Oral or nasal route - local anesthetic properties would set them apart Effects on Nervous System Actions - wide variety of influences on PNS & CNS Periphery sympathomimetics increase BP, HR, body temp, metabolic rate Increase physical strength & endurance Central Nervous System Low or acute doses increased arousal level & alertness improve performance on simple tasks produce mild euphoria increase of sex drive early on, but reverses with prolong use High Dose & CNS Higher doses - (i.e., smoking) intense feeling of euphoria described as “whole body orgasm” hyperactivity repetitive behaviors - hand clasping, nose rubbing manic condition can occur drug wears off severe depression or crash Side Effects and the Major Stimulants Common side effects Stimulant (e.g., cocaine) psychosis Euphoria, turns to paranoid delusion With tactile & auditory hallucinations Disrupted associative thinking Commonly aggressiveness also found Formication or parasitosis (bugs crawling all over or under skin) occurs most commonly in repeat users Toxicity & Tolerance of Major Stimulants Toxicity Related to peripheral actions on CV system Heart attack or cerebral hemorrhage (stroke) Severe depression lead to suicide?? May induce seizures with respiratory paralysis Tolerance Decrease NT stores & receptor down regulation Induces depression found in chronic users Appetite suppression develops rapid tolerance along with CV actions Amphetamine Neurotoxicity Amphetamine and methamphetamine are potentially neurotoxic 10 to 50 times normal street dose (in rats; primates may be more sensitive) Depletes DA and degenerates DA terminals Dependence & Major Stimulants Dependence Moderate for occasional use via oral or intranasal route (e.g., Indians in Andes develop no dependence) IV or smoking, severe dependence potential want to have more to experience pleasure and ward off depression Other Stimulants Khat Cathinone active agent in Khat (shrub) chewed synthetic version (meth-cathinone) O C CH CH 3 Cathinone NH 2 Betel Nut The fruit of the Areca catechu tree Contains Arecoline Mild stimulant that is a cholinergic agonist Not a high abuse potential Ephedrine from Ma Huang (herbal tea) isolated in 1920’s bronchodilator for asthma pseudoephedrine is an isomer of ephedrine structure similar to epinephrine OH CH CH CH 3 Ephedrine NH CH 3