Benzodiazepines are drugs with sedative qualities used to treat muscle spasms, convulsions, anxiety, and alcohol withdrawal. This is not the class of drugs that hydrocodone falls under.
Hydrocodone is a opiate agonist, antitussive used in the treatment of mild to moderate pain. The drug is considered to have similar sedative qualities in larger doses, but the recreational use is deterred due to the high content of acetaminophen.
No. Hydrocodone is an opioid (narcotic).
No. Hydrocodone is semi-synthetic opioid.
No, the medication named Hydroxyzine is not a barbiturate. In fact, it's one of the only tranquilizers that is classified as a non-barbiturate.
Hydrocodone is an opiate. Butalbital, Seconal, Tuinal....these are examples of barbiturates.
Hydrocodone is a a synthetic opiate, and not a benzodiazepine.
No Vicodin is not a barbiturate
No, hydrocodone is not a barbiturate.
no, it's a narcotic
yes
No. A barbiturate is a cellular poison, an opiate mimics a normal neurotransmitter, thus changing the action of a cell but not the cell itself.
No. Only a barbiturate will yield a positive barbiturate test, barring false-positives
No - Fiorinal is a combination of Aspirin, Butalbital (a barbiturate) and Caffeine. It's only an opiate analgesic when it's combined with Codeine.
No oxycontin is an opiate an will show up as such.
No, it is related to substituted pyrimidine derivative which has similar action to that of Barbiturate but doesn't belong to barbiturate, phenyton related to group of Hydantoins.
no, no barbiturate will show up as an opiate on any pee test.
Methadone is a synthetic opioid used as a replacement therapy and or for pain management. Barbiturates are sedatives that are for the most part no longer prescribed. Because barbiturates increases (potentiate) CYP 3A4 liver enzymes (the primary enzyme that metabolizes methadone), the combination of the two can result in rapid metabolism of methadone and put an individual who is on a stable methadone dose into withdrawal.
i am 99.9 percent sure it is not an opiate. an opiate is in a class of narcotics derived from thebaine or even coke. Butalbital is a barbiturate which means its pretty much a muscle relaxer, mixed with Tylenol and caffeine it is used for migraines. Opiates are like vicodin,oxycontin,morphine....and so on. lol so to make a long answer short.....no
Dilaudid is an opioid (synthetic). "The term opiate is properly limited to only the natural Alkaloidfound in the resin of the Opium_poppy" (Wikipedia)
No, morphine is not a barbiturate.
No, Maxalt is a triptan, not a barbiturate.
No, vitamin B12 is not a barbiturate