Cocaine Addiction Essays

  • Crack-Cocaine Addiction

    1695 Words  | 4 Pages

    Crack-Cocaine Addiction at It’s Best In quite a few lower-class communities, phrases like “your mom is a crack head,” or “shut up crack baby” are said jokingly to make fun of someone during what we call a “rip session.” Although said as a joke, some are very offended by the comments. Why? because for some, crack addiction hits too close to home for comfort. Seeing how easy it is obtained in lower class and poverty stricken neighborhoods, many find themselves falling victim to the powerful substance

  • Biology Of Cocaine Addiction

    1945 Words  | 4 Pages

    Monica Farfan The Biology of Cocaine Addiction Drugs are addictive substances that produce pleasant states such as euphoria or relieve distress. Drugs are classified into categories which include: depressants, stimulants, and hallucinogens. Depending on the type of drug and the way it is used, referring to if it is sniffed, swallowed, injected, or smoked depends the effect the addiction of that drug has on the body. Scientists such as Koob and Le Moal argue that drug addiction is caused by the dysregulation

  • Cocaine and the Brain: The Neurobiology of Addiction

    2202 Words  | 5 Pages

    Cocaine and the Brain: The Neurobiology of Addiction In the eyes of the public, the word addict stirs up a negative image: a person of low moral character who willfully chooses to engage in questionable behavior. This image is perpetuated in the media; on a recent episode of E.R., the chief surgeon criticizes another doctor for allowing a heroin addict (who has been treated for an abscess) to exchange a dirty needle, explaining "we donât want these low-lives hanging around the hospital." The

  • Cocaine Addiction In Less Than Zero

    1024 Words  | 3 Pages

    In Less Than Zero, cocaine addiction tests a group of three friends against the backdrop of glamorous, 1980’s Los Angeles. I chose this film because I’ve read the novel by Bret Easton Ellis. While the movie differs quite a bit from the book, it still touches on some key points about drug use that Ellis speaks to in the novel. At the beginning of the film, Clay, Julian, and Blair have graduated high school in Beverly Hills. Clay chooses to leave and attend a prestigious university. Blair (Clay’s girlfriend)

  • Celebrity Addictions to Alcohol, Heroine and Cocaine

    790 Words  | 2 Pages

    approach her body as a knock at the door yells “LETS GO! IT’S SHOW TIME!” Addiction to drugs is very common in most music artist today. Society stresses the need for better music to vibe to, so music artists turn to an easier way to deal with it. It has damaged many music artists over the years and hasn’t gotten any better today. Most artists are faced with developing a bad addiction problem. Those who admit they have an addiction problem, seeks help and continues the rest of their musical career. As

  • Addiction to Cocaine in The Ascent by Ron Rash

    620 Words  | 2 Pages

    In “The Ascent” Ron Rash introduces us to a child who is brought up by cocaine addicts name Jared. Jared ventures out into the Great Smokey Mountains National Park to escape his sad home life and on his little adventure Jared finds the lost plane authorities had been looking for, for months. Upon leaving Jared takes the ring from the woman on the plan and returns home where he finds that his parents have already run out of drugs. His father takes the ring Jared had found and then sales the ring for

  • scar

    535 Words  | 2 Pages

    Frank Lopez (Robert Loggia). Lopez immediately takes a liking to Tony, who takes a liking to Lopez’s trophy girlfriend Elvira (Michelle Pfeiffer). Lopez is not greedy; he is happy with the state of his business, but less happy with Elvira’s cocaine addiction. As Scarface progresses, it details Tony’s rise in the drug business as well as his relationships with his partner Manolo, his sister Gina (Mary Elizabeth Mastrantonio) -of whom he is overprotective- and Elvira. Scarface is loosely based on

  • Life In The Hood

    1440 Words  | 3 Pages

    He lay in his bed motionless, reflecting upon his life and how it had changed so quickly. He had lost his mother to an evil cocaine addiction a year earlier and was left to take care of his younger brother. The rent was 3 months over due, the phone was cut off, and the electricity was most likely next. He had reached the point were he was fed up with life. Why had he been put in this position? He put most of the blame on his mother for she had been the one who had spent all of their money on drugs

  • Facts On Cocaine

    2772 Words  | 6 Pages

    Cocaine is a powerful central nervous system (CNS) stimulant that heightens alertness, inhibits appetite and the need for sleep, and provides intense feelings of pleasure. It is prepared from the leaf of the Erythroxylon coca bush, which grows primarily in Peru and Bolivia. Street dealers dilute it with inert (non-psychoactive) but similar-looking substances such as cornstarch, talcum powder, and sugar, or with active drugs such as procaine and benzocaine (used as local anesthetics), or other CNS

  • Cocaine

    1483 Words  | 3 Pages

    Cocaine When you reach into the refrigerator for a Coca-Cola, do you ever wonder where it got its name? You might be surprised to find out! When coke was created 120 years ago, it contained cocaine (Bayer 27). At the time scientists did not realize that cocaine was addictive and dangerous. Scientists today know that cocaine is among the strongest stimulants known, and trying the drug even one time can cause heart attack, stroke, and even death. "Even the most in shape athlete could die from

  • Cocaine

    1807 Words  | 4 Pages

    Cocaine Cocaine is a drug derived from the leaf of the Erytroxylon cocoa bush, which grows primarily in Peru and Bolivia. Cocaine also known as coke, C, snow, flake, nose candy, blow, or crack is generally sold on the street as a hydrochloride salt( a water-soluble salt). Cocaine is a fine, white crystalline powder often diluted with similar-looking substances such as talcum powder, sugar, or amphetamines. The powder can be snorted into the nostrils, also may be rubbed onto the mucous linings

  • HIstory of Cocaine

    1390 Words  | 3 Pages

    history of cocaine, current prevalence rates and health effects among other issues. 1.0 Introduction A. Attention Material: Cocaine is mostly known as an illegal drug, but very few truly acknowledge it for its medical purposes and fully understand its history in the country. Cocaine is a tropane ester alkaloid ,which is extracted from the leaves of the coca (Erythroxylon coca) plant (Clayton, 1996). Cocaine is considered the most powerful and most dangerous drug of natural origin. Cocaine is illegal

  • Effects of Cocaine, Seratonin and Melatonin on the Brain

    2627 Words  | 6 Pages

    chemical effects on the brain, one must first get an understanding for the chemicals as well as how the brain works to interpret and react to signals set out by these chemicals, rhythmically and physiologically. Several chemicals observed include: cocaine (and other chemicals), seratonin, and melatonin. Nature and life are full of rhythms. Rhythms in nature include: day and night, seasons, tides, and lunar and solar cycles. Humans are driven by rhythms like: heartbeats, breathing rates, sleep

  • The Coca Plant: The Coca Plant

    1169 Words  | 3 Pages

    Will Boettcher Biology 355 Erythroxylum coca The Coca Plant The coca plant belongs to the family of Erythroxylacae. This family is comprised of about 200 species, while only four species produce the alkaloid cocaine in its leaves, the most important of which is Erythroxylum coca. Erythroxylum coca is a four to six foot high shrub which is cultivated extensively in South American, especially in Bolivia, Peru, and Columbia. It flourishes best in the warm valleys on the eastern slopes of the Andes

  • Jordan Belfort: The Wolf Of Wall Street

    1410 Words  | 3 Pages

    fiend; in fact he was introduced to cocaine by his mentor, Mark Hanna. But through time Jordan found that cocaine alone didn’t satisfy his cravings and he needed something stronger. Later in his journey he is found using up to seven drugs at any given time. “On a daily basis, I consume enough drugs to sedate Guatemala for a month. I take Quaaludes 10-15 times a day for my back pain, Adderall to stay focused, Xanax to take the edge off, pot to mellow me out, cocaine to wake me up again, and morphine…because

  • Methamphetamines Essay

    891 Words  | 2 Pages

    Methamphetamine’s (Meth) abuse has rapidly become a highly additive stimulant and has led to a serious problem in the US. Data collected in 2012 by the Nation Survey on Drugs and Health found that over 12 million people have tried meth at least once, that’s roughly 4.7 percent of the population. Methamphetamines have been around for a while, it is not new but has just evolved because of more powerful manufacturing techniques.it was first made in 1887 as amphetamine in Germany, but evolved into methamphetamine

  • Visual Illusion Essay

    1282 Words  | 3 Pages

    What are some of the elements involved in creating visual illusions? What role does culture play? Visual illusions are images that are perceived different thanfrom the reality of the image. What the eye sees does not match the measurement of the stimulus source. These illusions demonstrate the difference between perception and reality. Visual illusions are known to be tricks the brain because you know exactly how an object is setup yet you still see it how it was perceived instead of how it actually

  • Comparison of Drug Courts or Cognitive Behavior Therapy to Battle Cocaine Addiction

    1480 Words  | 3 Pages

    There are thousands of people in the United States that are addicted to cocaine and are left untreated. Many of them are at risk of severe health problems. I am conducting this research paper to compare and contrast the differences between the effectiveness of drug courts and cognitive behavioral therapy for cocaine addicts. We know that all people respond differently to therapy than others do, but it is good to be able to find the effectiveness and success rate of cognitive-behavioral therapy,

  • Crack Cocaine Research Paper

    1695 Words  | 4 Pages

    Crack Cocaine Crack is the name given to cocaine that has been transformed into a condensed, more pure, rock form that can be smoked. It is the most addictive form of cocaine due to a higher potency level than the typical batch of street cocaine. Crack cocaine has often been referred to as a ‘soul drug’ because it has a tendency to rob its victims of everything including money, family, morals, and even life itself. Furthermore, it is possible to become addicted to crack cocaine from the very first

  • Pros And Cons Of Crack Cocaine

    1065 Words  | 3 Pages

    This is an unfair policy that treats the same active ingredient different. This policy discriminates against blacks who received 81 percent of the crack cocaine sentences (Provine, 2007, p 4). An important predictor for crime and delinquency is family disruption and many black families are disrupted (Miller, J.,2008) Disrupted black families are majority ran by single mothers having fathers incarcerated