For more mental health resources, see our National Helpline Database. However, because it is often cut with a variety of different ingredients, you really don’t know what’s in the cocaine you buy. While some of these fillers do little more than increase a drug dealer’s profits, others are very harmful and even deadly. Some are even intended to mimic cocaine’s natural properties, which increases the risk to even experienced users.

What Is in Cocaine?

Cocaine contains a chemical substance called benzoylmethylecgonine. It is found in the leaves of the Erythroxylum coca plant, which grows at high altitudes in the Andes Mountains of Peru, Bolivia, and Colombia, as well as on the island of Java in Indonesia. When coca leaves are processed into powder and freebase cocaine and crack, the resulting drug is artificially concentrated to produce a more rapid onset of effects. This is also what makes it more addictive. When cocaine is processed by the liver, metabolites form. These metabolites, such as ecgonine methyl ester and benzoylecgonine, pose health risks even after someone uses cocaine. Benzoylecgonine, for instance, is a vasoconstrictor. This means that it narrows the blood vessels surrounding the heart and may cause adverse cardiovascular effects.

How Cocaine Is Made

During the initial processing, the coca leaves are made into cocaine paste—a white, gray, or dull-brown powder. This intermediate form of cocaine contains 40% to 80% cocaine sulfate. It is sometimes used in this form in South America and some parts of the United States, where it is known by the names pasta or bazooka. This cocaine paste is further refined to produce cocaine hydrochloride crystal, the key ingredient in powder cocaine and crack cocaine. It is sold as a white powder that is usually sniffed or snorted up the nose. Users can also take it orally or smoke or inject it. Freebase and crack cocaine, which are types of cocaine that have been further refined so that they can be smoked, are prepared using alkalis. These include ammonia and sodium bicarbonate (baking soda) or solvents, such as ether.

Filler Ingredients

Before it’s sold, cocaine hydrochloride is usually “cut” or mixed with other substances. These fillers may make up to 80% of the final product. The filler ingredients that are cut into cocaine vary greatly, which adds to the danger of the drug. They may include:

Additives with psychoactive or numbing effects that can greatly increase the risk of using the drug concoction sold as cocaine. Poisonous fillers that cause harm through toxicity but don’t have any psychoactive effects White powders that merely mimic the appearance of cocaine and weaken the effect of the cocaine

Various inert white powders are used as fillers, including talc, flour, cornstarch, and various sugars. Other fake ingredients that aren’t toxic but simply weaken the drug include baking soda, vitamin C powder, glucose, and baby formula powder. Several other ingredients have been found in some cocaine samples:

Quinine, sometimes added for its bitter flavor Thiamin, also known as vitamin B1 Tyramine, a food substance that can induce migraines and is dangerous for people taking monoamine oxidase inhibitors Sodium carbonate, also known as washing soda Magnesium silicate, also known as asbestos Magnesium sulfate, also known as Epsom salts Salicylamide, a non-prescription pain reliever

One study of seized drugs identified 26 elements, including forms of calcium, magnesium, sodium, phosphorus, aluminum, iron, manganese, and zinc.

Psychoactive Ingredients

Cheaper stimulants, particularly other white powdery stimulants such as caffeine, are commonly used to cut cocaine, which makes it more dangerous and increases the risk of addiction. Amphetamines, crystal meth, methylphenidate, ergotamine, and aminophylline are also often mixed with cocaine. Fentanyl is a powerful synthetic opioid analgesic that is similar to morphine but is 50 to 100 times more potent than heroin. As fentanyl is not the same kind of drug as cocaine, it might not seem to make sense that it would be used to cut cocaine. However, this does happen, possibly because of the intense euphoria that both drugs induce in users. Other opioid compounds, such as carfentanil, are being found in cocaine. These are even more potent and toxic than fentanyl.

Poisonous Ingredients

Although it is relatively rare for poisonous ingredients to be mixed into cocaine, the dangers are severe. Cocaine containing poison is known among users as a “death hit” because it can be lethal. Seek medical help immediately if you or someone you know has taken cocaine and is experiencing adverse effects. Strychnine is a toxic ingredient that is sometimes mixed with cocaine. It is used in rat poison and can kill humans. Psychological symptoms of strychnine poisoning are similar to the negative effects people sometimes experience from cocaine. These include anxiety, restlessness, agitation, and an increased startle response. Strychnine also causes physical symptoms like muscle pain and spasms, a rigidity of the arms and legs, and the arching of the neck and back. Jaw tension is also a symptom shared by stimulants such as meth and ecstasy, so they may be easily missed. Arsenic, too, sometimes gets cut into cocaine and causes death if consumed in large amounts.

Anesthetic Ingredients

Cocaine has a natural numbing effect on the nose, throat, and gums. For this reason, cheap and legal local anesthetics, such as procaine (Novocain), lidocaine, tetracaine, and benzocaine, are often mixed with cocaine. This gives experienced users the impression that the cocaine they purchased is of high quality. These substances do not produce the high of cocaine, but they are used in dental procedures and produce a similar freezing sensation when snorted or rubbed on the gums. A user will sometimes test cocaine by rubbing a little of the powder on their gums. In a study of seized drugs, lidocaine was found in more than 66% of cocaine samples seized. Although anesthetics themselves are legally used for medical and dental purposes, they are not without risks. These drugs include clinical contraindications and they may have significant side effects. Additionally, the side effects may be unsafe and distressing to experience while under the influence of cocaine, especially because of the cocaine effects of anxiety and paranoia.

A Word From Verywell

Whether you are using pure cocaine or cocaine cut with other substances, it may be time to quit. If you need help with overcoming substance-related problems or addiction to any drug, support and services are available. If you are using cocaine as a way to deal with low self-esteem or if you are self-medicating because you want to hide depression, there are much more effective ways of managing both. Cocaine use is not a solution, because, like all addictive behaviors, it only masks the problem and it actually brings more problems of its own.