1. Home
  2. Parenting & Family
  3. Parenting of Adolescents
Drug Use: Cocaine - Crack
What are the short term effects of cocaine use?

 How Much Do YOU Know?
• Cocaine and Crack Quiz
 
 
 Related Resources
• What is Cocaine?
• What is crack?
• What is the scope of cocaine use in the United States?
• How is cocaine used?
• What are the short term effects of cocaine use?
• What are the long term effects of cocaine use?
• What are the medical complications of cocaine abuse?
• Are cocaine abusers at risk for contracting HIV/AIDS and hepatitis B and C?
• What treatments are effective for cocaine abusers?
• Pictures of Cocaine and Crack Cocaine
• Slang Terms for Crack
• Slang Terms for Cocaine
 
 

Cocaine's effects appear almost immediately after a single dose, and disappear within a few minutes or hours. Taken in small amounts (up to 100 mg), cocaine usually makes the user feel euphoric, energetic, talkative, and mentally alert, especially to the sensations of sight, sound, and touch. It can also temporarily decrease the need for food and sleep. Some users find that the drug helps them to perform simple physical and intellectual tasks more quickly, while others can experience the opposite effect.

The duration of cocaine's immediate euphoric effects depends upon the route of administration. The faster the absorption, the more intense the high. Also, the faster the absorption, the shorter the duration of action. The high from snorting is relatively slow in onset, and may last 15 to 30 minutes, while that from smoking may last 5 to 10 minutes.

The short-term physiological effects of cocaine include constricted blood vessels; dilated pupils; and increased temperature, heart rate, and blood pressure. Large amounts (several hundred milligrams or more) intensify the user's high, but may also lead to bizarre, erratic, and violent behavior. These users may experience tremors, vertigo, muscle twitches, paranoia, or, with repeated doses, a toxic reaction closely resembling amphetamine poisoning. Some users of cocaine report feelings of restlessness, irritability, and anxiety. In rare instances, sudden death can occur on the first use of cocaine or unexpectedly thereafter. Cocaine-related deaths are often a result of cardiac arrest or seizures followed by respiratory arrest.

Drugs of Abuse
AlcoholCocaine/CrackEcstasy
HeroinInhalantsKetamine
MethMarijuanaNicotine
RitalinSteroids
More Resources
• Warning Signs of Teenage Drug Abuse
• Big Changes From Elementary School to Middle School
• Pressured Tweens & Teens Turn to Alcohol & Drugs
• Help for the Innocent
• Americans in Denial About Drug Abuse
• Sex Under the Influence of Alcohol and Other Drugs
• Youth Risk Behaviors
• Impaired Driving and Teenagers

Source: The National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA).

Explore Parenting of Adolescents

More from About.com

  1. Home
  2. Parenting & Family
  3. Parenting of Adolescents
  4. Teen Drug Use
  5. Cocaine and Crack
  6. Cocaine Crack Drug Use teens

©2008 About.com, a part of The New York Times Company.

All rights reserved.