Freebase Cocaine: High Bioavailability with Increase in Potency

  • Freye E
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Abstract

During the late 1960s, American cocaine smugglers travelling in South America noticed some of the local populace of Peru and Colombia smoking a substance identified to them as cocaine. When word of this reached the US, several users experimented with smoking cocaine hydrochloride sprinkled on cigarettes, and quickly discovered that street coke literally goes up in flames. What was wrong? The smugglers had disregarded an important point: the Peruvians were smoking Coca Paste (``Pasta''), which contains alkaloidal cocaine (cocaine base). While cocaine base melts already at about 98ºC, cocaine hydrochloride (street cocaine) melts at 195ºC with decomposition. The task then was to find a way to perform a little ``reverse chemistry'', that is to turn cocaine hydrochloride back into cocaine base. The process to accomplish this was already in use by some skilled users who wanted to ``purify'' their cocaine by turning it into the base in order to remove diluents and cuts. Then they promptly turned that base back into cocaine hydrochloride. It was when someone put two-and-two together that cocaine ``freebase'' was born.

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APA

Freye, E. (2009). Freebase Cocaine: High Bioavailability with Increase in Potency. In Pharmacology and Abuse of Cocaine, Amphetamines, Ecstasy and Related Designer Drugs (pp. 43–47). Springer Netherlands. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-90-481-2448-0_7

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