[Finished Printing? - Click Here to Return to Normal View]


NIDA Home > Publications > Research Monographs >    

Research Findings of Smoking of Abused Substances



NIDA Research Monograph, Number 99 [Printed in 1990]

Get Adobe Reader This monograph is not available by chapter. The Table of Contents (below) is shown to assist in locating information prior to downloading the monograph.

Download Monograph99.pdf - Research Findings of Smoking of Abused Substances (865 KB)


Table of Contents

Introduction and Overview-----1
Nora Chiang

Current Patterns of Drug Abuse That Involve Smoking-----5
Donald R. Wesson and Peter Washburn

Clinical Pharmacology of Inhaled Drugs of Abuse: Implications in Understanding Nicotine Dependence-----12
Neal L. Benowitz

The Pharmacology of Cocaine Smoking in Humans-----30
Reese T. Jones

Marijuana Smoking: Factors That Influence the Bioavailability of Tetrahydrocannabinol-----42
Mario Perez-Reyes

Effects of Habitual Use of Marijuana and/or Cocaine on the Lung-----63
Donald P. Tashkin, Suzanne Fligiel, Tzu-Chin Wu, Henry Gong, Jr., Richard G. Barbers, Anne H. Coulson, Michael S. Simmons, and Theodore F. Beals

Marijuana Effects and Urinalysis After Passive Inhalation and Oral Ingestion-----88
Edward J. Cone

Pyrolytic Degradation of Heroin, Phencyclidine, and Pyrolytic Degradation of Heroin, Phencyclidine, and Cocaine: Identification of Products and Some Observations on Their Metabolism-----97
C. Edgar Cook and A. Robert Jeffcoat

Chemical and Biological Analysis of Marijuana Smoke Condensate-----121
Charles M. Sparacino, Patricia A. Hyldburg, and Thomas J. Hughes

Pyrolysis and Inhalation Studies With Phencyclidine and Cocaine-----141
Billy R. Martin and Joseph Boni

Animal Models of Drug Self-Administration by Smoking-----159
Ronald W. Wood

List of NIDA Research Monographs-----172




NIDA Home | Site Map | Search | FAQs | Accessibility | Privacy | FOIA (NIH) | Employment |



National Institutes of Health logo_Department of Health and Human Services Logo The National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) is part of the National Institutes of Health (NIH) , a component of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. Questions? See our Contact Information. Last updated on Tuesday, July 22, 2008. The U.S. government's official web portal