Cocaine intoxication is when you become restless and overactive while or shortly after using cocaine. You feel very sensitive and "picked on." You feel angry and destructive.
Cocaine is a drug made from the leaves of the coca plant, which grows in South America. It is a stimulant that causes physical and psychological arousal, increased confidence, talkativeness, increased breathing and heart rate, increased energy, and sleeplessness. Cocaine can also numb an area of the body quickly.
Some people are more sensitive than others to cocaine. Cocaine intoxication can kill you.
Cocaine intoxication occurs when you smoke, snort, or inject too much cocaine.
Cocaine stimulates some of the chemicals in the brain and body that change physical states and emotions. At first you feel pleasure, increased energy, and enhanced self-esteem. You also have less anxiety and are less self-conscious.
Cocaine also affects sexual behavior. In small doses cocaine increases sexual arousal and makes orgasms and erections easier. In large doses cocaine makes you feel increased sexual desire but you are less able to achieve orgasm. Men may have problems with impotence.
These pleasurable feelings make you want to repeat the high. You may need larger and larger doses of cocaine to produce the feelings of the first few doses. This may lead to becoming physically and psychologically dependent on cocaine.
The effects of cocaine are short-lived. This may cause you to binge (take the drug continually over several hours, or even a week). This may lead to an overdose.
You may have these symptoms when you use cocaine, or shortly afterward:
Chronic snorting of cocaine can lead to:
To diagnose cocaine intoxication, your healthcare provider will review your symptoms, examine you, and take a history of drug use. You may also have tests such as CT scans, head X-rays, or an electrocardiogram (ECG). Your urine may be analyzed. Cocaine can remain in urine for many hours after you have used the drug.
Your healthcare provider will treat your physical symptoms, including:
If you become intoxicated with cocaine often, and your cocaine use is so out of control that it interferes with your life, seek treatment for cocaine dependence. You can join a self-help group (for example, Cocaine Anonymous), a support group, a therapy group, or be part of a supervised treatment program. The healthcare providers and counselors will work with you to develop a treatment program.
How rapidly you will feel the effects and how long they will last depends on whether you smoke, sniff, or inject cocaine. Most effects begin within seconds and last up to an hour.
During a binge, effects may last up to 48 hours after the last dose.
The best way to help yourself is to see your healthcare provider and make plans to stop taking cocaine. If you are already seeing a healthcare provider, it is important to take the full course of treatment he or she prescribes.
You may want to call the National Clearinghouse for Alcohol and Drug Information (NCADI) at 1-800-729-6686.