- A man in his 30s went to the ER with excruciating pain after he injected
cocaine into a penile vein. - The doctors said the penis was black, ulcerated, and releasing a foul-smelling discharge.
A man's penis turned black after he injected it with cocaine, according to a report by the Amercian Journal of Case Reports.
The 35-year-old Hispanic man went to the ER with "excruciating" pain in his penis and scrotum three days after injecting the
On examining him, the doctor said his penis was swollen, black, ulcerated, and oozed a foul-smelling discharge.
The man had a long history of intravenous drug use, they said.
Cocaine is one of the "most dangerous drugs available," the doctors said. This is because it's highly addictive.
The drug, which is illegal, can be snorted, smoked, or dissolved and injected into a vein. When injected, it can trigger blood vessel inflammation, which can cause gangrene — the death of body tissue. The doctors said that cocaine in the US can be cut with a de-worming drug called levamisole, which causes blood vessel inflammation too.
The man told the doctors that he'd previously injected cocaine in the same vein at least twice in the past two weeks "without any complications." The dorsal penile vein the man used runs the length of the shaft.
The dorsal vein is an unusual place to inject but it's not uncommon for drug users to use new injection sites once others, such as arm veins, become damaged, the doctors said.
The man refused any surgery to cut away the dying tissue. He was treated with a cocktail of strong intravenous antibiotics for five days and then a further five days with oral ones, alongside wound care, according to the report.
His "clinical condition" slowly improved but unfortunately, the man refused drug rehabilitation treatment and was later "lost to follow-up", the doctors said.
"Intravenous drug users should be counseled to seek help and should be advised to enroll in drug rehabilitation programs, as cocaine cessation is the only definitive treatment," the doctors said.
According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, more than 5 million Americans reported "current cocaine use" in 2020, which is almost 2% of the population. Cocaine was involved in nearly 1 in 5 overdose deaths in 2019, it said.