Table of Contents
- Overview
- Symptoms
- Treatment
- Prevention
- Images
Stroke is a loss of brain function due to an interruption of the brain's blood supply. It can be caused by using the illegal drug cocaine.
Causes, incidence, and risk factors
Cocaine is a product of the coca plant and is an illegal recreational drug. It is not a narcotic (a drug which causes drowsiness and sleep, typically heroin or other opiates) although it is sometimes referred to as one.
Cocaine is a strong stimulant, which produces increased activity of the
Cocaine can be taken into the body in several ways and in several forms. Powdered cocaine (hydrochloride) can be snorted, injected, eaten, or applied to mucus membranes such as the vagina or rectum. The "freebase" form (often called crack) can be smoked.
The amount of cocaine required to produce an effect varies with the individual, the purity of the drug, and the means of taking it into the body. A smaller amount is used with injection into a vein or with smoking.
Cocaine use can cause a number of medical problems, including transient ischemic attacks (
Stroke secondary to cocaine is most common in men under 40 years old. Risks include a history of recent cocaine use. In a few people who experience
Cocaine use can also lead to lung damage from smoking, damage to veins, transmission of blood-borne diseases (due to dirty needles), damage to a unborn baby, and very high body temperatures(hyperthermia). Cocaine also causes mood swings,
Although it does not produce the dramatic withdrawal symptoms seen in heroin addiction, cocaine is extremely addictive and users who stop may experience severe drug craving, depression, and lethargy.
Images
Review Date: 04/28/2006
Reviewed By: Daniel Kantor, M.D., Director of the Comprehensive MS Center,
Neuroscience Institute, University of Florida Health Science
Center, Jacksonville, FL. Review provided by VeriMed Healthcare
Network.
A.D.A.M., Inc. is accredited by URAC, also known as the American Accreditation HealthCare Commission (www.urac.org)
