Crossref journal-article
American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)
Science (221)
Abstract

Nineteen healthy volunteer subjects who regularly administered cocaine to themselves were given placebo and 10 and 25 milligrams of cocaine hydrochloride intravenously and intranasally. A dose of 100 milligrams of cocaine was administered only by the intranasal route. By this route 10 milligrams of cocaine produced no changes different from placebo, and 25 milligrams of cocaine produced physiologic changes only in systolic blood pressure. The 100-milligram dose given intranasally and all of the doses given intravenously produced significant dose-related physiologic and subjective responses.

Bibliography

Resnick, R. B., Kestenbaum, R. S., & Schwartz, L. K. (1977). Acute Systemic Effects of Cocaine in Man: A Controlled Study by Intranasal and Intravenous Routes. Science, 195(4279), 696–698.

Dates
Type When
Created 18 years, 10 months ago (Oct. 5, 2006, 12:03 p.m.)
Deposited 1 year, 7 months ago (Jan. 15, 2024, 6:33 a.m.)
Indexed 19 hours, 33 minutes ago (Sept. 4, 2025, 10:02 a.m.)
Issued 48 years, 6 months ago (Feb. 18, 1977)
Published 48 years, 6 months ago (Feb. 18, 1977)
Published Print 48 years, 6 months ago (Feb. 18, 1977)
Funders 0

None

@article{Resnick_1977, title={Acute Systemic Effects of Cocaine in Man: A Controlled Study by Intranasal and Intravenous Routes}, volume={195}, ISSN={1095-9203}, url={http://dx.doi.org/10.1126/science.841307}, DOI={10.1126/science.841307}, number={4279}, journal={Science}, publisher={American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)}, author={Resnick, Richard B. and Kestenbaum, Richard S. and Schwartz, Lee K.}, year={1977}, month=feb, pages={696–698} }