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What Is Coke Bloat? How Cocaine Use Affects Your Face and Body

Drue Seigerman LPC, LCADC

Executive Director — Houston, TX

Drue Seigerman is a Licensed Professional Counselor and a Licensed Clinical Drug Counselor. He received his first master’s degree in Human Services from Cappella University and his second master’s degree in Marriage and Family Therapy.

As the Executive Director of Virtue Recovery Houston, Drue has developed and implemented numerous programs to meet the needs of the mental health and addiction community. For over 20years Drue has been an expert in the field of addictions and has presented at numerous national conferences on how to work with oppositional clients in the group setting. Drue has also been a guest speaker on several radio shows including NBC discussing various behavioral health topics.

As an Adjunct Professor Drue brings his knowledge in the field of mental health and addictions to students seeking to obtain certification as an alcohol and drug counselor in the state of NJ. As a former New York City Police Officer, Drue brings a unique background to the field in helping those in need.

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Cocaine Addiction
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“Coke bloat” is a colloquial term for the facial puffiness, jowl swelling, and body water retention that develop in people who use cocaine regularly. It is most visible in the cheeks, jawline, neck, and under the eyes. The swelling can come and go at first, then become persistent.

It is not caused by weight gain. Cocaine suppresses appetite, so many users are underweight while still appearing puffy. The bloat is driven by the physiological effects of chronic cocaine use disorder.

Cocaine: The Drug, Its Use, and Its Impact

Cocaine is a powerful stimulant derived from the coca plant. It blocks the reuptake of dopamine, norepinephrine, and serotonin in the brain, flooding the reward system with feel-good signals and producing a short, intense euphoria [1]. It is snorted, smoked as crack cocaine, or injected. The high lasts only 15–30 minutes, which drives repeated use in rapid cycles, a pattern that accelerates physical harm.

Cocaine use carries serious public health consequences. Stimulant-related emergency visits — cocaine being a primary driver — rose sharply in California between 2017 and 2021 [2]. Nationally, cocaine accounts for a large share of stimulant-related deaths and hospitalizations, and the economic cost runs into the billions annually. Cocaine use disorder frequently co-occurs with depression, anxiety, and other substance use disorders, worsening outcomes for individuals and families [3].

What Is Coke Bloat, Exactly?

Coke bloat is facial and body swelling caused by regular cocaine use. Cocaine disrupts the nervous system, stress hormones, and the liver, all of which govern how the body holds fluid. These changes signal deeper physiological damage. With professional treatment, many of them reverse.

Why Cocaine Causes Facial Puffiness and Bloating

Several overlapping mechanisms drive coke bloat:

  • Cortisol dysregulation. Cocaine triggers a cortisol surge. Chronically elevated cortisol promotes fluid retention and redistributes fat to the face and neck, the same mechanism behind puffiness from long-term steroid use.
  • Vasoconstriction and rebound vasodilation. Cocaine constricts blood vessels throughout the body [4]. When the drug wears off, vessels dilate rapidly. This rebound causes fluid to leak from blood vessels into surrounding tissue, producing puffiness in the face and extremities.
  • Liver stress. Repeated cocaine exposure inflames the liver and impairs albumin production. Albumin keeps fluid inside blood vessels; when levels drop, fluid leaks into surrounding tissues throughout the body.
  • Systemic inflammation. Chronic cocaine use activates the immune system, raising inflammatory markers. Inflammation in facial tissues causes visible swelling. Adulterants in street cocaine — especially levamisole, a livestock dewormer — make inflammation far worse [5].

Other Ways Cocaine Changes Your Appearance

Beyond bloating, cocaine causes a range of visible physical changes:

  • Nasal and facial destruction. Repeated snorting damages the nasal septum. Loss of blood supply over time causes tissue death that can collapse the nose and erode the hard palate, documented clinically as midline destructive lesions [6].
  • Skin lesions and ulcers. Levamisole, found in the majority of the street cocaine supply, destroys small blood vessels. This produces painful, slow-healing skin ulcers and necrosis, often on the face, ears, and limbs [7].
  • Pallor and poor skin tone. Chronic vasoconstriction reduces skin blood flow, resulting in a gray complexion, impaired wound healing, and accelerated aging.
  • Weight loss and muscle wasting. Cocaine strongly suppresses appetite. Long-term users typically lose significant weight and muscle mass, worsening the hollow, aged look that accompanies facial swelling.

How Cocaine Affects Your Body Beyond Your Face

The physical changes extend well beyond appearance:

Body SystemEffects of Chronic Cocaine Use
Heart and vesselsHeart attack, arrhythmia, cardiac arrest, even in young, otherwise healthy users [4]
Immune systemSevere neutropenia (dangerously low white blood cell count) from levamisole exposure [5]
BrainRewired reward circuits, impaired decision-making, memory loss, and heightened risk of depression [1]
LungsCrack lung (hemorrhage and inflammation), chronic cough, and respiratory failure in crack users
Mental healthCocaine use disorder often co-occurs with depression, anxiety, PTSD, and psychosis, worsening outcomes [3]

Can Coke Bloat Reverse After Quitting?

For most people, facial puffiness starts to improve within days to weeks of stopping cocaine use. As cortisol stabilizes and the liver recovers, the body reabsorbs excess fluid. Skin tone, weight, and energy typically improve over months.

Structural damage, such as septal perforation or levamisole-induced skin ulcers, requires medical care and may not fully resolve. Early intervention increases the extent of recovery possible.

Treatment for Cocaine Use Disorder

No FDA-approved medication exists specifically for cocaine use disorder, but the condition is highly treatable. Cognitive Behavioral Therapy helps people identify triggers and build coping skills. Contingency management — rewarding drug-free urine screens with incentives — has strong evidence in stimulant treatment.

Residential and intensive outpatient programs offer structured early-recovery support. Co-occurring mental health conditions are treated alongside substance use for better outcomes [3].

Key Takeaways

  • Coke bloat, facial puffiness, and body swelling are caused by cortisol surges, vascular rebound, liver stress, and systemic inflammation from cocaine use.
  • Cocaine damages the nose, skin, heart, immune system, and brain; many of these effects are visible and worsen the longer use continues.
  • Most physical changes from cocaine, including bloating and skin problems, improve significantly after quitting and entering evidence-based treatment.
  • Recovery is possible. Reaching out to a treatment provider is the first step toward healing your body and your life.

Virtue Recovery Center offers medical detox and cocaine addiction treatment at locations across Nevada, Arizona, Texas, and Oregon.

Whether you’re looking at your own use or supporting someone you care about, care is available close to home.

If you or someone you love is ready to stop using and wants to do it safely, our medical detox team is here. We’ll walk you through what to expect, answer your questions honestly, and help you take the first step with the support it deserves.

We operate multiple Joint Commission-accredited facilities across Nevada, Arizona, Texas, and Oregon with a full continuum of care — from residential treatment to PHP, IOP, and outpatient services.

Call us today or verify your insurance online.

Sources

[1]Dodd S. et al. (2025). Central nervous system stimulants in recreational and medical use. CNS Spectrums, 30(1), e52.
[2]Han B. H. et al. (2025). Trends in stimulant-related emergency department visits among adults in California, 2017–2021. The American Journal of Emergency Medicine, 93, 94–98.
[3]Kalmin M. M. et al. (2026). Stimulant use and increased severity of opioid use disorder and mental illness in patients with co-occurring disorders. Journal of Substance Use and Addiction Treatment, 188, 209997.
[4]Laska A. et al. (2026). Successful lipid rescue therapy after prolonged cardiac arrest in acute cocaine intoxication: A case report and mini-review. Die Anaesthesiologie, 75(5), 344–347.
[5]Olash B. (2025). Levamisole-adulterated cocaine: A case of vasculitis and severe neutropenia. Cureus, 17(12), e100358.
[6]Agrawal B. S. et al. (2026). Midline destructive lesions of face: A dermatology perspective. Indian Dermatology Online Journal, 17(3), 452–458.
[7]Zavaro A. et al. (2025). The ulcerative effects of levamisole-induced vasculitis. Cureus, 17(8), e90012.

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