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6.
The Truth about Cocaine
Crack and Heroin Addiction
Cocaine addiction -
Crack addiction -
Big scares but what is the reality? -
Crack-related violence - Crack
rehabilitation - Heroin
and other opiates - Pattern of use
- Revival after overdose
in casualty - Process of drug
addiction - The truth
about withdrawal -
How does heroin work in the brain? -
Worries in the US
The Truth
about Drugs - book on drug addiction by Dr Patrick Dixon - published
by Hodder 1998 Chapters:
Acknowledgements - Definitions
- Introduction - 1.The
Size of the Drugs Problem - 2.The
True Cost of Drug Addiction - 3.Addicted
to Pleasure - 4.Caffeine,
Alcohol and Tobacco - 5.Cannabis
- 6. Cocaine addiction,
Crack addiction and Heroin addiction - 7.Amphet
amines, LSD, Ecstasy and the Rest - 8.Why
Governments are Scared of Prevention - 9.Treatment
of drug addiction works - 10.Legislation
and Decriminalization; The Arguments over Marijuana - 11.Conclusions;
What We Must Do - Appendices
Related issues in this chapter: Cocaine, crack cocaine, cocaine
and crack, cocaine addiction, cocaine information, history of cocaine,
cocaine manufacturing, effects of crack cocaine, cocaine abuse,
cocaine effects, making crack cocaine, effects of cocaine, drugs
cocaine, make crack cocaine, prices cocaine, cocaine facts, cutting
cocaine, crack cocaine babies, making cocaine, information on cocaine,
cocaine use, coccaine, cocaine baby, cocaine cutting agents, cocaine
testing, cocaine overdose, cocaine anonymous, side effects of cocaine,
cocaine side effects, effects of cocaine use, synthetic cocaine,
symptoms of cocaine use, facts about cocaine, cocaine addiction
treatment, cocaine in urine, cocaine info, cost of cocaine, freebase
cocaine, crack cocaine addiction, the effects of cocaine, cocaine
addiction symptoms, what is cocaine, cocaine production, information
about cocaine, cocaine symptoms, cocaine babies, how long does cocaine
stay in your system, cocaine statistics, effects of cocaine to a
baby, cocaine made, the history of cocaine, cocaine addicted babies,
cocaine treatment.
Hydrocodone, heroin, opium, morphine, narcotics anonymous, fentanyl,
narcotics, codeine, opiates, narcotic, heroin addiction, endorphins,
opium smoking, heroin effects, opium war, heroin facts, opium poppy,
information on narcotics, morphine effects, heroin pictures, the
drug morphine, make opium, tylenol with codeine, heroin drug, opium
wars, morphine drug, narcotic pain killers, morphine side effects,
morphine sulfate, opium pipes, effects of smoking opium, heroin
abuse, history of opium, history of heroin, information on heroin,
narcotic pain medication, opium poppies, opioids, morphine addiction,
heroin addicts pictures, narcan, opiate, endorphin, opium effects,
, , Cocaine
(Return to Index)
Terms:
Coke (cocaine, charlie, wash, rock, base, stones (crack)
The cocaine family of drugs are some of the
most dangerously addictive drugs in the world.
Cocaine is a white powder refined from the
coca plant which grows in South America. It is usually placed on
a smooth surface such as glass and cut up with a razor blade, forming
thin lines or trails which can then be sniffed up through a makeshift
straw such as a banknote."Snorting" is the commonest form of consumption
although it is sometimes injected. It is easily absorbed through
he lining of the nose.Repeated snorting of cocaine damages the membranes
of the nose and can perforate the nasal septum (barrier between
one side of the nose and the other.)
Cocaine and crack speed up the body in a similar
way to amphetamines, but the effect is shorter and more intense
- less than an hour for cocaine and as short as several minutes
for crack. As with amphetamines, cocaine releases an intense rush
of energy, makes a person feel good, mentally sharp, talkative and
confident. When blood levels begin to dive, the craving is often
overwhelming to take more.As with all drugs and life experiences,
the greater the high, the worse the fall.
The early euphoric experience disappears in
heavy users, who can feel very restless, with nausea, excitability,
extreme agitation, anxiety, paranoia and possible hallucinations.Very
high doses can rarely cause heart failure, convulsions and death.
Regular cocaine users often have interrupted sleep patterns.They
feel unable to cope until they've had some charlie, stressed-out
and irritable.Life for weekend users can become a process of trying
to get through the week until Friday.Regular users may feel that
they cannot have a "good time" without the drug.Stopping the drug
produces terrible headaches, tiredness, nausea, sleepiness and depression.
Crack
(Return to Index) Free-basing
(smoking) is done by mixing cocaine with other substances and sodium
hydroxide.The salt base dissolves leaving granules of pure cocaine.These
are smoked in a pipe. The vapours in the lung hit the brain in eight
seconds, producing a massive high which lasts around ten minutes,
after which it needs repeating.That is why some people can easily
get through several hundred pounds of crack in an evening.Cocaine
and crack are also used during sex, and cocaine can prolong sex
in a man by acting as a local anaesthetic on the genitalia.
Crack babies have been a growing problem in
the US. One NIDA study in the US found that 200,000 used illegal
drugs in pregnancy of which 20% used crack or cocaine. The effect
on babies can be terrible.Risks are increased of premature labour,
stillbirth, low birth weight, ectopic pregnancy, stillbirth, sudden
infant death and small size at birth. Behind these words are tens
of thousands of individual lifetime tragedies, for example children
whose mental development has been permanently affected by what happened
to them in the womb.
Sex trades for crack are a common occurrence,
and this has led to sexual abuse of women in "crack houses" by dealers
and male users, especially in the US.These women are at exceptionally
high risk not only of pregnancy, but also ofsexually transmitted
diseases including HIV.
Cocaine and alcohol are a hazardous combination.
The human liver combines coca and alcohol metabolites to form new
cocktails which are toxic.
Big
scares but what is the reality?
(Return to Index)
In 1989 there were many predictions in the
press that America would be severely affected by crack and that
Britain was also about to become engulfed. Part of this was based
on the fact that the US cocaine market was already becoming saturated
following a large rise production in South America.
Almost a decade later those threats have yet
to materialise.However it is true that by 1987 seizures of cocaine
in Britain exceeded that of heroin for the fist time and by 1991
seizures had doubled.Cocaine was a high fashion drug in the 1980s,
particularly in the city and the entertainment and media world.By
1995 large amounts of cocaine were being processed into crack so
that in some areas cocaine was relatively hard to find, and crack
distribution networks were well organised.
Crack-related
violence
(Return to Index)
Crack has a bad reputation for extreme violence,
probably for several reasons.Firstly it is highly addictive and
the habit is expensive so large amounts of money are needed to keep
a user happy and stakes are high for people seeking to control a
distribution area.The drug itself can cause anxiety, fear and paranoia,
and when knives or guns are around, murder can easily be the result.
Crack rehabilitation
(Return to Index)
Treating crack addiction can be hard - even
attracting users into programs can be a real challenge.Cocaine users
are often very different culturally from heroin users and often
prefer to keep well apart.Crack clients can be far more aggressive
and instantly demanding than heroin users, and many drugs services
find it hard to respond.Crack users are not offered substitute medication
- the equivalent to methadone for heroin users.Many crack users
are black and feel uncomfortable in a white-dominated support centre.Finally,
paranoia itself can fuel natural suspicions of authority.
So then, crack and cocaine are real threats
even if their use is more limited than some feared it would be.Fashions
in drug culture come and go.Expect further surges in crack consumption
in particular groups over the next couple of decades with decline
in others.Each wave of experimentation leaves a hard core of chronic
addicts.They are a small minority of those who have ever used the
drug but are a large part of the market.
Heroin
and other opiates
(Return to Index)
Terms: Smack, junk,
skag, H, brown, shit, horse, harry, boy
Heroin addiction makes headlines and raises
the blood pressure of politicians yet nothing is what it seems.Heroin
addiction is often a stage in a young adult's life, rather than
the final chapter.And pure heroin adiction can be unusual.In many
places the addiction is more to the lifestyle of the needle, and
to whatever can be injected through it, including a wide range of
opiates - part of the same family of drugs as heroin.
Heroin used to be an end-stage drug, the one
someone used after all the others.This is no longer true. With the
huge fall in the street price of a wrap, heroin is becoming an experimental
drug for large numbers of young people, who may not be injecting
it. Deaths can be accidental from overdosage, or from multiple medical
problems caused by injecting infected material over a long time.But
heroin can wipe out a large section of an entire community. Once
addiction is established, heroin kills around 1.5% of users a year.But
that's without the impact of .AIDS.
I will never forget my first trip to India.
After travelling over a thousand miles by air and land, our land
rover screeched to a halt at the end of the dust track through the
outskirts of a remote.We were just a few miles from the Burmese
border in territory dominated by continual tribal disputes and tension.
We were invited into a simple wooden shack, where a woman was dying.Out
of 40,000 adults in the village, 8,000 were injecting heroin and
4,000 had HIV. She could hardly move, was too weak to eat and had
painful sores all over her body.We gave her some basic medication
and advice to her family and went on to the next home, and the next.All
were young, and all were dying of heroin addiction.
This is a huge proportion of the younger adults
in that village.In another home we found both teenage sons of the
local church leader were infected and ill, with one dying. The parents
in the village were beside themselves with worry.What do you do
when you know that six out of ten of the older pupils at school
are using heroin every day? How do you keep your own children safe?Every
street corner is a place of danger.Every home becomes a possible
place of supply.Villagers were talking of setting up various clubs
to keep teenagers occupied out of school.There was very little for
them to do in the village in the evenings or weekends - apart from
hang around with others and get into trouble.
This is what happens to communities which are
in or close to major opium growing areas.Heroin is ultra-cheap,
and becomes as available as tobacco or beer. Taking heroin becomes
a normal way of life.
It is far too easy to dismiss such terrible
happenings in remote villages as unimportant to the rest of the
country or beyond, but that is to misunderstand what is happening.
The following day we flew to New Delhi, a huge sprawling city.In
a drug rehab project there we met around thirty former heroin users,
almost all of them from the same tribes as we had visited the previous
day.The drugs problem in the North East had travelled over a thousand
miles to create a new crisis in India's capital.The same has been
happening in other larger cities.
Heroin is an off-white or brown powder made
from extracts of poppies, papaveretum somniferum. The raw opium
is collected from the dried milky sap of the opium poppy, which
forms a gum containing codeine, morphine and alkaloids.Heroin is
made from the morphine and in weight terms is 50% more powerful
than morphine.
These poppies are now grown in many countries
including Burma, Afghanistan and more recently in the former republics
of the Soviet Union as well as Columbia.Many synthetic opiates are
also finding their way onto the street from pharmaceutical companies
and the health service supply chain.These include pethidine, buprenorphine
(Temgesic), dipipanone (Diconal) and methadone (Physeptone).Other
milder opiate preparations are also abused including dihydrocodeine
(DF118) and codeine.
Pattern of use
(Return to Index)
Heroin
can be smoked, swallowed, sniffed or injected.Fumes from heated
heroin can be inhaled ("chasing the dragon"). It makes the user
feel relaxed and happy, "wrapped up in cotton wool", dreamy and
drowsy in larger doses. It slows reactions and damages concentration.Blood
levels halve in three hours so the effect rarely lasts more than
four or five hours. It causes nausea and vomiting, especially with
first-time use.
Non-sterile injections cause abscesses, damaged
veins and septicaemia, hepatitis and AIDS.Heroin, like all other
opiates, also causes severe constipation. Sniffing heroin damages
the nose.Heroin depresses the nervous system including coughing,
breathing and heart rate, dilating blood vessels so the person feels
a warm glow, and dilating the pupils of the eyes.
Heroin is almost always cut with other substances,
of which sugar is the most common. Together with caffeine, talcum
powder and flour. As we have seen, the normal price has beenbetween
£15 and £40 for a wrap, but price falls have been up to 90% in some
areas. Nevertheless, someone taking heroin can easily spend £25
to £100 a day, as consumption tends to rise when the drug is cheap.
Mixing heroin with other depressant drugs like barbiturates or alcohol
can cause additive effects, making an overdose more likely.
Overdoses can also occur when a user who has
been supplied in the past with very impure heroin suddenly shoots
up with very pure stock.The same can happen if a user has been off
opiates for a while, and then uses the old dose.
Revival
after overdose in casualty (Return
to Index)
Heroin is reversible, often with spectacular
and bizarre results.The antidote to heroin, morphine and other opiates
is a drug called Naloxone which targets exactly the same chemical
receptors in brain cells that are excited by heroin, but has no
effect.When the brain is flooded with Naloxone, the Naloxone fills
these cell receptors and gets in the way of opiates and naturally
occurring endorphins.
I was working in the emergency rooms as a young
doctor one night as a man was brought in almost dead, having overdosed
on heroin.He had stopped breathing before the ambulance arrived,
but they kept him in the twilight zone between life and death with
oxygen and a ventilator.We were all lined up ready and the moment
he was brought in we located a vein and gave him a shot of Naloxone
(slowly).
In less than fifteen seconds this "dead" man
suddenly began to sit up, waving and thrashing his arms around,
climbing out of bed very confused (not surprisingly).Three or four
minutes later as he struggled to run out of the hospital he began
to stagger around, collapsed and was quickly unconscious again.Naloxone
acts quick and ends quick.He needed more and was fine the following
day. Many aren't so lucky.Another minute or two of delay before
the ambulance arrived and he would never have opened his eyes again.
Process of
addiction (Return
to Index)
Once someone is addicted, the usual euphoria
becomes replaced by a mere return to "normality" after another shot.
Heroin affects motivation so users may neglect themselves and not
eat properly. Addiction can lead to huge social and housing problems,
as well as criminal activity to pay for the habit.
The
truth about withdrawal (Return
to Index)
Much has been written about "cold turkey" and
the huge trauma of getting a heroin addict off the drug.Withdrawal
can certainly be very difficult."Clucking" or "cold turkey" is characterised
by unpleasant symptoms such as sold sweats, nausea, confusion and
intense craving.Non of these symptoms are physically dangerous.
Withdrawal effects start around eight to twenty
four hours after the last dose, with symptoms similar to flu - aches,
chills, sweating, sneezing, yawning and muscular spasms.These effects
take a week or two to subside but feeling of weakness and loss of
well being can last months. Psychological dependence can be even
harder to overcome than physical dependence.
Despite all this, some people have successfully
come off high doses of heroin without medication or massive withdrawal
symptoms (particularly common in some rehab units run as Christian
foundations outside Europe).Many factors are involved, not least
of all mental state. For example, a heroin user who injects regularly
may experience a "hit" even if he or she is injecting medical saline
(salty water) so long as the person believes
it to be heroin.This so-called placebo effect can be very powerful.
And there is far more to breaking a heroin
habit than the drug.There is also for many people the love affair
with the needle.Terry is a thin thirty six year old father of three
young boys who lives alone in a council flat near Dundee. He has
used heroin for several years, but is also injecting a whole range
of other drugs, crushed tablets, whatever comes his way.He sleeps
at night cuddling his syringe, holding it in his hand on the pillow
by his head.The needle is a symbol of comfort to him, a source of
happiness, even of hope.
For others the ritual of passing the needle
has a meaning: a sign of belonging, of being a part of the club.Much
of that has changed in a post-AIDS world, with most injectors now
using their own equipment, replenished from government funded needle
exchanges.
How
does heroin work in the brain?
(Return to Index)
So how is it that such
a dangerous and addictive drug can be so safely used in medicine?To
answer this question we first need to understand how the body feels
pain and how the brain adjusts to it.
Heroin mimics naturally occurring opiate-like
substances in the brain called endorphins.These have been extensively
studied and are well understood.Endorphins are released by a whole
range of normal activities including exercise and sex as well as
body massage and acupuncture.They affect our perception of pain
and our sense of well being.
If I were to inject a healthy person with heroin,
he or she would experience a "high", especially if the drug was
injected direct into a vein rather than a muscle.However if someone
is rushed into hospital with a badly broken leg, a heroin injection
does not produce a high, it just relieves pain.What happens?
When someone is in pain, endorphin levels in
the brain fall so the person becomes endorphin deficient.Giving
someone heroin or another opiate restores the normal balance of
brain substances so the person is relatively comfortable but not
euphoric or heavily sedated.
When the same drug is given to someone who
is not in pain, the brain
decides that the level of opiates is too high and shuts down endorphin
production, trying to bring levels back to normal.Then when the
drug level falls, the person becomes endorphin deficient, and experiences
withdrawal.These changes do not occur with the first dose, but accumulate
over time.Recovery from physical addiction to heroin is therefore
linked directly to the time it takes for the brain to get going
again with its own endorphin production.
We see the contrast in medicine when someone
who has been in severe pain and on high doses of opiates is suddenly
relieved of pain.I remember looking after a man with advanced lung
cancer who had pain in his ribs for which he was given morphine.
An anaesthetist came to the ward and gave him an injection to destroy
some of the pain-carrying nerves.Because these nerve blocks are
often only partly successful I left the morphine dose unchanged
overnight to review in the morning.
The following day I returned to the ward and
found him very contented but also very drowsy. The nerve block had
worked, his own endorphin levels had returned to normal and the
medication I had given him had now pushed him over the edge, so
that he was experiencing a mild overdose.We stopped the morphine
completely and he was soon alert and pain free, without suffering
from withdrawal.This was despite being on large doses for several
months.
So heroin and other opiates are not addictive when used to relieve pain.There is some acclimatisation
to the drug at first as the body gets used to it, during which time
any associated nausea and drowsiness usually wear off, but no addiction.I
have known patients with motor neurone disease who have been on
the same dose of morphine to relieve pain at night, over a number
of years.
Heroin does not shorten life when properly
used.The only way it could do so would be by depressing the respiration
rate, at its most extreme causing the person to die because he or
she stopped breathing.
It is a common tragedy that people die in terrible
pain because they, their relatives or their doctor are afraid of
morphine or heroin.If only they knew the truth.Indeed ignorance
about heroin is probably one of the chief causes of uncontrolled
pain in those with cancer.
Too many times morphine is withheld ("It will
kill him") until the person is almost at death's door and in unbearable
distress ("Now is the time to start the morphine and go on cranking
it up until it's all over").In my experience most people who ask
for euthanasia do so because of the ignorance of their doctors,
and most change their minds rapidly when correct symptom control
gives them a new lease of life.
Heroin can also be very useful when someone
is short of breath in the last days.I will never forget the first
person I ever met who was dying with AIDS.Here was a young man,
stuck in a glass-lined cubicle by the entrance to a busy ward, mask
over his grey face, gasping for breath, tubes in every orifice,
leads across his chest, struggling to survive, drowning in his own
secretions.He was terrified, knuckles white as he gripped the sides
of the bed.
I was shocked.Where was the morphine? "It will
kill him," I was told.Nonsense I replied.It will relax him, take
away the terrible feeling of suffocation and help
him breath - and anyway as you can see, he's almost at death's door.
I told them if they were worried to check the
level of oxygen in his blood with a skin monitor, and to reverse
the drug with Naloxone if needed.When I returned to the ward a week
later I asked about the young man.He had been given the opiates,
had relaxed and perked up for a couple of days before dying very
peacefully with his family at his side.They checked his blood gases.The
oxygen level rose and the carbon dioxide level fell.As he relaxed
he began to breath more normally.
Worries in the US
(Return to Index)
One of the problems about pain relief in the
US is the paranoia over heroin.This is foolish.Morphine is just
as addictive but there is one vital difference which makes morphine
almost useless for some people with severe cancer pain: solubility.A
large dose of morphine can only be dissolved in a few mills of water,
whereas the equivalent dose of heroin dissolves instantly in a few
drops.But if you are very ill, and thin, that's a very big difference
in comfort when the nurse arrives to give the injection.So people
dying with cancer across the US are suffering frequent large injections
of morphine unnecessarily.
In summary then, crack, cocaine and heroin-related
drugs are highly addictive and destructive drugs, which turn regular
users lives into a near permanent obsession about getting and paying
for the next dose.These drugs can be a major threat to whole communities
and to the forces of law and order.They are notorious for damaging
the lives of whole families where there is an addict in the house,
and injuring the health of the unborn through addiction acquired
in the womb.
These drugs raise profound issues about human
responsibility in law.
If a cocaine addict who is otherwise a sensitive and gentle
person kills someone in an intoxicated and paranoid rage, do we
blame the drug or the criminal irresponsibility of the addict?Clearly
we cannot tolerate a situation where an addict feels able to get
away literally with murder by pleading addiction and diminished
responsibility as a defence.However the truth is that the murder
would never have happened without the person being "out of his mind"
with drugs.
In most countries the courts recognise when
someone is suffering from - say - paranoid schizophrenia, and murder
charges are usually altered to allow he person to be committed to
a secure unit for treatment.
But should we offer some of the same kind of care to those
whose minds are temporarily deranged through drugs?
And if the addiction is dealt with, should the person still
be punished?
One cannot make general rules but it is clear
that these drugs profoundly alter the mind.After a bout of intensive
drug-taking many people are no longer in their right minds.Indeed
as we have seen, a drug-induced psychoses can be indistinguishable
in presentation from schizophrenia in the acute stage.This must
be taken into account in order to decide how mad or bad a person
was at the time of the crime.
Unfortunately, public sympathy is often very
low for drug addicts,who may be despised as the scum of the earth,
parasites on society, weak-willed, immoral and feckless non-citizens
unworthy of care or attention when they attack others.
The plight of the sobered up addict before
the courts is made worse by the politically correct movement which
has tried to rule out emotive terms altogether such as "addict"
with words like "user".But the trouble is that a "user" is like
anyone else who "uses" a car or a bus or a knife and fork.A "user"
can never make a claim for special treatment.On the other hand an
"addict" can, especially when the reality of life as an addict at
its worst is spelled out.
By definition an addict is someone who has
lost control to a drug, and, what is even more important, has a
brain which is profoundly altered by it.For an addict, being sober
is not being normal.Being sober is the worst possible position to
be in because it means that the person's body is drug-free, and
therefore experiencing terrible withdrawal symptoms.A crime may
be committed when a person is sober but withdrawing, but in such
a state one could say he or she is still being greatly influenced
by the drug.The brain chemistry is upset whether drugged or non-drugged.
These changes are true not just for heroin and cocaine but for
other drugs like amphetamines.
Cocaine -
Crack - Big
scares but what is the reality? -
Crack-related violence - Crack
rehabilitation - Heroin
and other opiates - Pattern of use
- Revival after overdose
in casualty - Process of addiction
- The truth about withdrawal
- How does heroin
work in the brain? - Worries in
the US
Chapters:
Acknowledgements - Definitions
- Introduction - 1.The
Size of the Drugs Problem - 2.The
True Cost of Addiction - 3.Addicted
to Pleasure - 4.Caffeine,
Alcohol and Tobacco - 5.Cannabis
- 6. Cocaine, Crack and
Heroin - 7.Amphet
amines, LSD, Ecstasy and the Rest - 8.Why
Governments are Scared of Prevention - 9.Treatment
Works - 10.Legislation
and Decriminalization; The Arguments over Marijuana - 11.Conclusions;
What We Must Do
- Appendices
Main Global Change Site Cannabis
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