Management of Cocaine Abuse and Dependence

Abstract
During the 20th century, there have been recurrent episodes of cocaine abuse in the United States that have achieved epidemic proportions.1 Although the total number of people using the drug has decreased in the past decade, cocaine-related biomedical and psychosocial problems remain a major public health problem in the United States and many other countries. The expanding list of cocaine-related toxic effects, acute and chronic, includes reproductive dysfunction, hepatic necrosis, and pulmonary disease.2 Abuse of and dependence on cocaine may also be associated with disorders of sexual function, sleep, anxiety, and mood, as well as with delirium and psychotic disorders. . . .

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