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There are literally hundreds. You can look them up on the DEA Schedule I of the controlled substances list.
No antibiotics are controlled. Controlled substances are those which have a possibility of dependency.
Phenytoin (Dilantin) is not a DEA controlled drug. It has no "schedule".
Controlled Substances are What the DEA are consider dependent drugs of harm from low risk to high risk The DEA categorize these drugs as schedules, 0/1-5 0 being very harmful and addictive to 5 being potentially but very unlikely. Because these Drugs are consider to be harmful the DEA requires all RX(prescriptions) that are controlled be regulated with DEA numbers and DPS numbers to log them, and keep track of them. --- However Antibiotics are not a schedule drugs, and no DEA number is needed for a RX of antibiotics ;so they are not classified as controlled substances because they are not addictive Controlled substance basically means in pharmacy addictive drugs.
Order controlled substances
Opiates are their own class of drugs. If you are talking about what class of controlled substances opiates are in, they are members of three classes. Illegal opiates like heroin and many other illegal drugs are DEA Schedule I drugs. No Schedule I drug is legal in the US. The stronger opiates like morphine, fentanyl, oxycodone, hydromorphone (Dilaudid), oxymorphone (Opana), and methadone are Schedule II controlled substances. The weaker opiates such as codeine, dihydrocodeine, and hydrocodone (Vicoden) are Schedule III drugs, although the DEA is currently considering moving hydrocodone into Schedule II.
Drug Enforcement Agency
Duragesic is DEA Schedule 2 Controlled Substance, meaning that: 1. The patient is only allowed a 30 day supply 2. All prescriptions must be new (no refills allowed) 3. Prescriptions cannot be called in - they must be new originals
The DEA (Drug Enforcement Administration) places substances into various schedules (1-5) based on their potential for causing addiction and medical usefulness. Marijuana (as THC, or dronabinol) is classified as schedule- 4, meaning its addiction potential is less than morphine, in schedule-2.
You don't unless your a Pharmaceutical company with a DEA permit to manufacture controlled substances.
YES. Tampering with someone's medications, especially if they are controlled substances by the DEA you could go to prison if convicted.
No, although a precursor to PCP is on the Schedule II DEA list, it will never be prescribed in this USA. PCP is a Schedule I Controlled Substance.