Cocaine use disorder

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Cocaine use disorder

C7

C7

Mood disorders: Clinical
Anxiety disorders: Clinical
Schizophrenia spectrum disorders: Clinical
Dissociative disorders: Clinical
Eating disorders: Clinical
Obsessive compulsive disorders: Clinical
Trauma- and stressor-related disorders: Clinical
Disruptive, impulse-control and conduct disorders: Clinical
Personality disorders: Clinical
Sleep disorders: Clinical
Somatic symptom disorders: Clinical
Sexual dysfunctions: Clinical
Paraphilic disorders: Clinical
Dementia and delirium: Clinical
Substance misuse and addiction: Clinical
Drug misuse, intoxication and withdrawal: Hallucinogens: Pathology review
Psychiatric emergencies: Pathology review
Schizophrenia spectrum disorders: Pathology review
Drug misuse, intoxication and withdrawal: Stimulants: Pathology review
Drug misuse, intoxication and withdrawal: Alcohol: Pathology review
Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors
Serotonin and norepinephrine reuptake inhibitors
Tricyclic antidepressants
Monoamine oxidase inhibitors
Atypical antidepressants
Typical antipsychotics
Atypical antipsychotics
Lithium
Nonbenzodiazepine anticonvulsants
Anticonvulsants and anxiolytics: Barbiturates
Anticonvulsants and anxiolytics: Benzodiazepines
Psychomotor stimulants
Opioid agonists, mixed agonist-antagonists and partial agonists
Opioid antagonists
Toxidromes: Clinical
Medication overdoses and toxicities: Pathology review
Environmental and chemical toxicities: Pathology review
Eating disorders: Pathology review
Major depressive disorder
Suicide
Bipolar and related disorders
Major depressive disorder with seasonal pattern
Premenstrual dysphoric disorder
Generalized anxiety disorder
Social anxiety disorder
Panic disorder
Agoraphobia
Phobias
Obsessive-compulsive disorder
Body focused repetitive disorders
Body dysmorphic disorder
Post-traumatic stress disorder
Physical and sexual abuse
Schizoaffective disorder
Schizophreniform disorder
Delusional disorder
Schizophrenia
Delirium
Amnesia
Dissociative disorders
Anorexia nervosa
Bulimia nervosa
Cluster A personality disorders
Cluster B personality disorders
Cluster C personality disorders
Somatic symptom disorder
Factitious disorder
Tobacco use disorder
Opioid use disorder
Cannabis use disorder
Cocaine use disorder
Alcohol use disorder
Serotonin syndrome
Neuroleptic malignant syndrome
Mood disorders: Pathology review
Amnesia, dissociative disorders and delirium: Pathology review
Personality disorders: Pathology review
Psychological sleep disorders: Pathology review
Malingering, factitious disorders and somatoform disorders: Pathology review
Trauma- and stress-related disorders: Pathology review
Developmental and learning disorders: Pathology review
Childhood and early-onset psychological disorders: Pathology review
Drug misuse, intoxication and withdrawal: Other depressants: Pathology review

Transcript

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Cocaine, sometimes called coke, is a powerful psychoactive stimulant that alters how the brain functions—specifically, how we perceive our surroundings.

Cocaine comes from the leaves of the South American coca plant, and has been used for over a thousand years.

In modern times, it’s become a popular “party drug” because cocaine reduces inhibitions and creates a feeling of euphoria or pleasure; this feeling lasts between fifteen and ninety minutes, depending on how the drug’s it’s administered.

Around 18 million people worldwide use cocaine, and because of its strong potential for addiction and overdose, the drug is heavily regulated in many countries.

To understand how cocaine works, let’s zoom into one of the synapses of the brain.

Normally, electrical signals, or action potentials, travel down the axon to the axon terminal, where they trigger the release of chemical messengers called neurotransmitters from synaptic vesicles into the synapse.

The neurotransmitters travel across the synapse and bind to receptors on the postsynaptic neuron, where they give the cell a message.

After the neurotransmitters have done their job, they unbind from the receptors, and can just diffuse away, get degraded by enzymes, or get picked up by proteins and returned to their release site in a process called reuptake.

Cocaine increases the release of certain neurotransmitters, but it’s biggest effect is blocking reuptake receptors on presynaptic axon terminals.

Both of these actions keep neurotransmitters like dopamine, norepinephrine, and serotonin in the synapse longer, increasing their effects.

For example, increased concentrations of dopamine in the brain’s reward pathway (which includes the nucleus accumbens, ventral tegmentum, and prefrontal cortex) produce intense feelings of euphoria, pleasure, and the emotional “high” associated with cocaine.

This physical “high” or feeling of hyper-stimulation is caused by increased norepinephrine concentrations throughout the brain, which produces a variety of effects throughout the body like increased energy, constricted blood vessels, dilated pupils, increased body temperature, increased heart rate, and increased blood pressure. Finally, these higher levels of serotonin are associated with greater confidence.

Cocaine can get into the blood and to the brain via a few different methods.

One way is by simply ingesting it, but the drug is often inactivated by stomach acid unless it’s mixed with something alkaline.

Cocaine is also metabolized by the liver, and it causes capillaries in the mouth and esophagus to constrict, which makes it harder for the body to absorb.

A more direct route is insufflation—snorting it—because the drug is easily and rapidly absorbed through the mucous membranes of the nasal passages, or smoking it so the drug can be absorbed through the lungs.

The fastest route, though, is direct injection into the blood.

Typically, the faster cocaine reaches the brain, the stronger the relationship between the behavior and the reward, which ultimately leads to addiction.

This huge potential for addiction is the reason many individuals keep coming back to use cocaine.

Now, your brain is constantly striving for balance, and if you use cocaine regularly, your brain starts to notice that it’s constantly flooded with dopamine.

As a result, it down-regulates dopamine receptors, which means that the receptor is no longer active and that dopamine can’t give its message as easily to the postsynaptic neuron.

This decreases the effect that a particular amount of dopamine can have on your brain, so if you want to continue to feel euphoric when taking cocaine, you have to take more and more to make up for the down-regulated receptors—and by this point, you’ve probably developed a physiological tolerance to cocaine’s effects.

More cocaine use means more down-regulation, but if the cocaine use stops, then the receptors slowly up-regulate once more.

Alright, so now let’s say that you’re at rest, there aren’t any drugs or anything stimulating your reward pathway.

In this situation, your brain keeps your heart rate, your blood pressure, and wakefulness in a normal state, called homeostasis.

Now, let’s say that your secret crush sends you a text.

All of a sudden you may feel sweaty and flushed, your heart rate may jump a bit.

You’re now above your normal level of homeostasis, because something has changed, right?

But it doesn’t stay that way for long, and after the text message, your brain brings things back down to this baseline.

With repeated cocaine use, a few things start to happen.

Let’s say you take cocaine at a specific time and setting, like 3:00 P.M. in the bedroom. Because it’s a stimulant, it makes everything speed up, including heart rate, blood pressure, and wakefulness.

Your brain, being the smart brain that it is, will pick up on the pattern. Now, next time at 3:00 P.M. in the bedroom, the brain preemptively decreases everything, since it knows that when you take cocaine, it’s all going to increase again.

Now, let’s say 3:00 P.M. in the bedroom rolls around again, but there’s no cocaine… In that situation, the brain still decreases everything, but the changes aren’t countered with the effects of the drug, and the person ends up feeling awful.

These awful feelings are called withdrawal symptoms, and they can persist to the point where a person may need drugs just to feel normal. If that’s the case, they are considered to be dependent on that drug.

Now, on the flip side, let’s say that you use the drug in an unfamiliar setting, like at 11pm at a party.

Sources

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  6. "Harrison’s principles of internal medicine" McGraw Hill Education/ Medical (2018)
  7. "Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders: DSM-5" American Psychiatric Assoc Pub (2013)
  8. "Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders: DSM-5" American Psychiatric Assoc Pub (2013)