| Literature DB >> 31798934 |
Abstract
Few travel health measures are as controversial as the use of coca leaves at high altitude; yet, there appears widespread ignorance among health professionals and the general public about coca, its origins as well as its interesting and often flamboyant history. Equally, the cultural and traditional significance to Andean people is not recognised. The coca leaves contain many alkaloids, one of which, cocaine, has gained notoriety as a narcotic, leading to the mistaken idea that coca equals cocaine. This article contrasts coca with cocaine in an attempt to explain the differences but also the reasons for this widespread misconception. By its very nature, there may never be scientific 'proof' that coca leaves do or do not work for travellers at altitude, but at least a solid knowledge of coca, and how it differs from cocaine, provides a platform for informed opinions and appropriate critical views on the current confusing and contradictory legal situation.Entities:
Keywords: Acute mountain sickness; Altitude; Coca leaf; Cocaine; Narcotics; Travel health advice
Year: 2019 PMID: 31798934 PMCID: PMC6880514 DOI: 10.1186/s40794-019-0095-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Trop Dis Travel Med Vaccines ISSN: 2055-0936
Studies on cocaine content in coca tea and benzoylecgonine concentration in urine
| Authors | Year | Preparation of infusion | Cocaine content of infusion | Urinalysis | Benzoylecgonine (BE) concentration in urine | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Siegel et al. [ | 1986 | HIT*: ~ 4.8 mg Mate de Coca: ~ 5.7 mg (= 0.13–0.68% as normally found in coca) | No evidence of ‘decocainisation’, No ill effect, no abuse | |||
| ElSohly et al. [ | 1986 | 1 teabag HIT in 1 cup | 2.15 mg | 6 samples within 29 h | Total amount excreted after 29 h: 818.8 μg + 31.1% of ingested dose. | Consider HIT consumption when interpreting data |
| Ferreira-Engelke et al. [ | 1991 | 40 teabags of HIT - 20 teabag (1 teabag/cup/10 min - 20 teabags extracted in ethanol/15 min (method by Turner [ | X ± SD 0.04% ± 0.017 0.33% ± 0.035 | Not decocainised; If stored for long (e.g. 3 years) cocaine in brewed tea 0.006–0.004%, in ethanol extraction 0.06–0.05% | ||
| Jackson et al. [ | 1991 | 1 cup of HIT | 1.87 mg | Samples over 36 h | Maximum BE concentration 1.4–2.8 mg/l Total BE excretion in 36 h 1.05–1.45 mg (= 59–90% of ingested cocaine) | Consider HIT when interpreting data |
| Floren et al. [ | 1993 | N = 2 1 cup/240 ml of tea brought from Bolivia | Technical problems prevented cocaine testing. Estimated 0.8 mg of BE (3.4 μg/ml) | In one subject 2608 ng/ml after 4 h; Both subjects negative after 24 h | Authors concerned about having had coca tea for 10 days in Bolivia. ‘Experiment’ poorly described. Emphasise ‘illegality’. ‘Decocainisation cannot be done’ 20-30 mg per line of cocaine | |
| Jenkins et al. [ | 1996 | Coca teabags from 1) Peru and 2) Bolivia randomly selected weighed and tea prepared 1 bag in 180 ml deionized water at 94 °C. Infusion times: 6, 9, 12, 15 min Subject drank 1 cup Peruvian tea; same subject drank 1 cup Bolivian tea on separate occasion | 2 methods of methanolic extraction for both sources Peruvian tea: 4.14 mg (range 3.40–4.76 mg) Bolivian tea: 4.29 mg (range 4.09–4.49 mg) | Samples over 48 h | BE in urine for at least 20 h | Steeping time increased cocaine content in Peruvian tea (3.94–5.88 mg), approx. 80% of available cocaine transferred to tea. Consider tea when interpreting data. |
| Turner et al. [ | 2005 | N = 1 1 teabag of Mate de Coca from Peru in 250 ml boiling water Steeped for 25 min. | 2.5 mg | Samples prior to consumption and 2, 5, 8, 15, 20, 21, 24, 43, 68 h after | Positive for BE 2–24 h after consumption | [IB: Nobody would steep tea for 25 min!] Consider tea when interpreting data in sports drug testing |
| Mazor et al. [ | 2006 | 1 teabag of Peruvian coca tea in 8 fluid ounces. Steeped for 15 min Each volunteer drank 1 more cup than the previous (A = 1 cup; B = 2 cups, etc) | Samples prior and at 2, 12, 24, 36 h after ingestion | Mean BE concentration in all samples: 1777 ng/ml (95%CI: 1060–2495) | Consider tea when interpreting data. |
*HIT = Health Inca Tea