It is a norepinephrine reuptake inhibitor. Norepineprhine is a stimulating neurotransmitter. It makes you feel up, energetic, and hyperactive. It also increases your heart rate and blood pressure. When norepinephrine is released from nerve cells in the synapse to send a signal on to the next nerve cell, there is a reuptake pump that removes the norepinephrine to cut the signal off. This keeps the pathway from firing to much or too long and preserves the norepinephrine for future use. Cocaine blocks the reuptake system and makes the stimulating stronger and last longer. However it that means that you also deplete your supply of norepinephrine and "crash". This makes you feel tired. So you keep wanting more cocaine to get back to that good (high) feeling, but because you have used up the norepinephrine you never quite reach it. That makes cocaine very addictive.
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yes
central nervous system
Tobacco effects mainly the respiratory system and nervous system. Alcohol effects the circulatory system the digestive system (e.g. liver) and the nervous system.
Cocaine is a powerfully addictive central nervous system stimulant that is snorted, injected, or smoked.
Alchohol and cocaine
yes, but it would never effect your brain. on your skin, cocaine will only numb your skin slightly, it used to be used as a local anethsetic. cocaine only effects you brain and nervous system if it gets into your blood
Alcohol temporarily slows the reactions of the nervous system.
Yes, alcohol's primary effects are on the central nervous system.
You can get a nervous breakdown from stress.
Opium
A scientific drug, dexmedetomidine, reverses the effects cocaine has on the cardiovascular system. It lowers elevated heart rate and blood pressure.
It dilates the bronchioles.
The central nervous system.Multiple Sclerosis effects the central nervous system