Crack Cocaine
Crack cocaine is a solid form of freebase cocaine. Crack cocaine is the street
name given to one form of freebase cocaine that comes in small lumps or shavings.
Freebase is the treatment of cocaine with chemicals which frees the cocaine base
from the hydrochloride and lowers the temperature at which the cocaine melts.
Unlike the processing of freebase cocaine, converting powder cocaine into crack
cocaine does not involve any flammable solvents. The powder cocaine is simply
dissolved in a solution of sodium bicarbonate and water. The solution is boiled
and a solid substance separates from the boiling mixture. This solid substance,
crack cocaine, is removed and allowed to dry. The crack cocaine is then broken
or cut into "rocks," each typically weighing from one-tenth to one-half a gram.
The term "crack" refers to the crackling sound heard when the mixture is smoked
(heated), presumably from the sodium bicarbonate. One gram of pure powder cocaine
will convert to approximately 0.89 grams of crack cocaine. The Drug Enforcement
Administration estimates that crack cocaine rocks are between 75 and 90 percent
pure cocaine.
Crack
cocaine is a powerfully addictive drug of abuse. After trying crack cocaine,
an individual cannot predict or control the extent to which he or she will continue
to use the drug. Crack cocaine has become a major problem in many American cities
because it is inexpensive (selling for between $5 and $10 for one or two doses
,usually 300-500mg) and easily transportable (it is sold in small vials, folding
paper, or tinfoil).
Crack cocaine is typically smoked in pipes constructed of glass bowls fitted
with one or more fine mesh screens that support the drug. The user heats the
side of the bowl (usually with a lighter), and the heat causes the crack cocaine
to vaporize. The user inhales the cocaine-laden fumes through the pipe. Absorption
is facilitated by the large surface area of the lungs' air sacs, as crack cocaine
is smoked. It is absorbed almost immediately into the bloodstream, taking only
19 seconds to reach the brain. However, only 30 to 60 percent of the available
dose is absorbed due to incomplete inhalation of the cocaine-laden fumes and
variations in the heating temperature.
Smoking
remains the predominant route of crack cocaine administration in Pulse
Check cities around the country. However, some sources indicate that crack
cocaine is also sometimes injected or snorted. Snorting is the process
of inhaling crack cocaine powder through the nose where it is absorbed
into the bloodstream through the nasal tissues. Injecting is the act of
using a needle to release the crack cocaine directly into the bloodstream.
Smoking involves inhaling the crack cocaine vapor or smoke into the lungs
where absorption into the bloodstream is as rapid as by injection.
In some cities, crack cocaine is combined with other substances and injected.
For example, in Washington, D.C., it is reported that crack cocaine is
combined with heroin and marijuana and then injected. Also, in New Orleans,
crack cocaine is injected with heroin in a "speedball." Additionally,
crack cocaine can be sprinkled in cigarettes and smoked. Usually the crack
cocaine is ground up and sprinkled into a marijuana joint and smoked.
These cocaine and crack cocaine laced joints are referred to as primos.
When
people mix cocaine and alcohol consumption, they are compounding the danger
each drug poses and unknowingly forming a complex chemical experiment within
their bodies. NIDA-funded researchers have found that the human liver combines
cocaine and alcohol and manufactures a third substance, cocaethylene, that intensifies
cocaine's euphoric effects. This combination also increases the risk of sudden
death. Sudden death takes place when the users body chemistry is imbalance to
the slightest degree. This releases toxic chemicals into their body creating
a reaction within the individual resulting in cardiac arrest. This negative
reaction to crack cocaine's toxic chemicals is the cause of "sudden death".
Pure
cocaine was first used in the 1880's as a local anesthetic in eye, nose, and
throat surgeries because of its ability to provide anesthesia as well as to
constrict blood vessels and limit bleeding. Many of its therapeutic applications
are now obsolete due to the development of safer drugs. Approximately 100 years
after cocaine entered into use, a new variation of the substance emerged. This
substance, crack cocaine, became enormously popular in the mid 1980's due in
part to its almost immediate high and the fact that it is inexpensive to produce
and buy.
Traditionally,
cocaine was a "rich man's drug," due to the large expense of a cocaine
habit. Now, crack cocaine is being sold at prices low enough that even adolescents
can afford to buy it. This is misleading though. Once a person is addicted to
crack cocaine, his "habit" often increases, and therefore so does his expense.
The
association of crack and criminal activity is commonly believed but not well
documented. One study of 200 crack addicts who used crack daily correlated more
with illicit/criminal activities to obtain a supply of crack than to demographic
features. Correspondingly, felony and crack cocaine dealing was associated with
total dollars spent on crack cocaine but not to other demographic features such
as level of property or affluence. Moreover, the majority of crack cocaine addicts
in this sample used cocaine by snorting it before progressing to the use of
smoking crack cocaine. The average time from onset of crack cocaine use to seeking
help for crack cocaine addiction is less than 3 years. Severity of crack cocaine
use and addiction as measured by daily use was associated with psychosocial
consequences more than other demographic features.
Crack
cocaine remains a serious problem in United States. According to the 2001 National
Household Survey on Drug Abuse, approximately 6.2 million (2.8 percent) of Americans
age 12 or older had tried crack cocaine at least once in their lifetime, 1.0
million (0.5 percent) used crack cocaine in the past year, and 406,000 (0.2
percent) reported crack cocaine use in the previous month. Among high school
students surveyed in the 2001"Monitoring the Future" study, 3.0% of
8th graders, 3.1% of 10th graders, and 3.7% of 12th graders reported using crack
cocaine at least once during their lifetime. These percentages are down from
3.1%, 3.7%, and 3.9%, respectively, during 2000. 1.7% of 8th graders, 1.8% of
sophomores, and 2.1% of high school seniors reported previous year crack cocaine
use during 2001. Percentages reporting previous month crack cocaine use were
0.8% for 8th graders, 0.7% for 10th graders, and 1.1% for 12th graders.
Regarding
the ease by which one can obtain crack cocaine, 24.4% of 8th graders, 30.6%
of 10th graders, and 40.2% of high school seniors surveyed in 2001 reported
that crack cocaine was "fairly easy" or "very easy" to obtain. During 2000,
2.5% of college students and 4.6% of young adults (ages 19-28) reported using
crack cocaine at least once during their lifetime. 0.9% of college students
and 1.2% of young adults reported crack cocaine use in the past year, while
0.3% of college students and 0.4% of young adults reported crack cocaine use
in the previous month.
According
to preliminary data for January to September 2001 from the Arrestee Drug Abuse
Monitoring (ADAM) Program, 4.5% of arrestees reported using crack cocaine in
the seven days prior to arrest, 16.2% reported previous month crack cocaine
use, and 21.1% reported previous year crack use.
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