Drugs of abuse - cocaine and nicotine Flashcards
Where does cocaine come from?
- Cocaine is s plant-based compound (erythroxylum coca plant)
- The leaves of the plant contain cocaine
How is cocaine paste formed? What % is extracted?
- Crushing up the leaves with an organic solvent to form a paste -> extract around 80% of cocaine
How is cocaine HCl made and what is its use?
- Cocaine HCl (major medicinal form of cocaine) is formed by dissolving the leaves in acidic solution
- Cocaine HCl was used as an anaesthetic, but was also the major form that was abused initially
What is the problem with cocaine HCl?
Solution?
- It degrades when heated
- Solution: CRACK COCAINE
What is crack cocaine?
- Precipitate cocaine HCl with an alkaline solution (e.g. baking soda)
- Once this solution dries and hardens, you end up with little cocaine rocks (you can inhale the vapour)
What is the most prevalent drug in terms of usage on the planet?
crack cocaine
How can crack be purified?
- By dissolving it in a non-polar solvent (e.g. ammonia or ether)
- This is called freebase and can be inhaled
How do the speeds of onset from inhaling and injecting cocaine differ?
What about intranasal and oral?
- nearly the same
- intranasal (snorting) is still fast but oral is the slowest
Why form of cocaine administration giver larger bioavailability and why out of injecting and inhaling
- Intravenous administration is much better for getting a larger amount of the drug into the blood (100% bioavailability)
- In inhalation, a lot of the drug is lost due to absorption issues
Why does cocaine taken via the oral route have prolonged absorption?
pKa = 8.7, so if taken via the oral route, cocaine will be ionized in the GIT (acidic environment). Because it is ionised, it is slower absorbed -> prolonged action.
Which method of administering is poorest in terms of bioavailabilty?
inhaling
How fast is cocaine metabolised? Why?
What is its half life?
Which enzymes?
- Cocaine is rapidly metabolised (half life of 20-90 minutes)
- By plasma and liver cholinesterases
- The speed is related to the fact that there are enzymes in the blood (plasma) as well as the liver
What are the metabolites of cocaine?
What % of cocaine is metabolised into these metabolites?
There are two major metabolites produced: ecgonine methyl esther and benzoylecgonine
Around 75-90% of cocaine is broken down into these inactive, inert, metabolites
Why is cocaine so addictive?
SPEED OF ONSET Addiction is very closely correlated with how fast the effect comes on. The faster the onset of the effect, the more powerfully addictive it is (associated with stimulus)
o SPEED OF BREAKDOWN There is a powerful euphoric high very quickly, and it is then lost very quickly too (due to fast clearance). This is a reason for continuously taking it (cocaine ‘binging’) -> reinforcing effect
What are the 2 major effects of cocaine?
How does it do these things?
What doses is this at?
Which effect is seen more commonly and why?
- LOCAL ANAESTHETIC (HIGH DOSE) The major clinical use of the drug is that it is a local anaesthetic. It does this by blocking sodium channels within nerves -> reduced propagation of APs -> suppressed pain sensation
- REUPTAKE INHIBITION (LOW DOSE) Dopamine is released into the synapse; it binds to the receptor and produces an effect. It eventually needs to be removed from the synapse so the effect can be ceased, via the dopamine transporter. The dopamine transporter takes molecules of dopamine from the synapse, and flips it back into the pre-synaptic cell.
Cocaine blocks these dopamine transporters. This can affect dopamine, NA and serotonin. This is a lower dose effect, so it is seen more commonly than the local anaesthetic effect.