Cocaine + Methamphetamine: What Happens at the Transporter?
Question:How does a bump of cocaine affect the transporter when taken with meth?
Short AnswerCocaine and methamphetamine both act on the brain's monoamine transporters, but they do so through different mechanisms.
Cocaine:- Blocks dopamine transporter (DAT)
- Blocks norepinephrine transporter (NET)
- Blocks serotonin transporter (SERT)
- Prevents reuptake of neurotransmitters
Methamphetamine:- Enters neurons through DAT and NET
- Disrupts vesicular storage via VMAT2
- Reverses DAT and NET transport direction
- Forces dopamine and norepinephrine out of neurons
What Happens When Combined?Methamphetamine causes dopamine and norepinephrine to be released into the synapse.
Cocaine prevents those neurotransmitters from being cleared away.
The result is:
- Increased neurotransmitter release
- Reduced neurotransmitter clearance
- Large accumulation of dopamine and norepinephrine
- Longer-lasting stimulation
Functionally, the transporter system becomes overwhelmed:
- Meth pushes dopamine outward
- Cocaine blocks reuptake inward
- Extracellular dopamine remains elevated
Major EffectsDopamine:- Greater euphoria
- Stronger reinforcement
- Increased compulsive redosing
Norepinephrine:- Elevated heart rate
- Elevated blood pressure
- Vasoconstriction
- Increased arrhythmia risk
Serotonin:- Additional mood and stimulation effects
- May contribute to agitation and overheating
Overall SummaryMethamphetamine forces monoamines out of neurons.
Cocaine prevents their reuptake.
Together they produce:
- More dopamine released
- Less dopamine cleared
- Higher and more prolonged synaptic concentrations
This can substantially increase cardiovascular stress, agitation, paranoia, hyperthermia, and stimulant psychosis risk compared with either drug alone.
Discord-Sized SummaryCoke = DAT/NET/SERT blocker (prevents reuptake).
Meth = DAT substrate + reverse transport (forces dopamine release).
Together: more DA/NE released + reuptake blocked → transporter "jam" and sustained monoamine buildup.
Result: amplified stimulation, but disproportionate NE load → high BP, HR, vasoconstriction, arrhythmia risk, agitation, and psychosis risk.