sure do on some of them just have to reed the box to see if the panel calls for it
If the drug test effectively tests for Benzodiazepines, then yes, it will. If it is a generic urine test purchased for home use, they usually do not test for Benzos. Home urine tests only test for THC, Cocaine, PCP, Methamphetamines, and Amphetamines.
they both fall under the category "benzodiazepines" which is a category on most drug tests, but a lab can easily figure out what drug triggered the benzodiazepine reaction. most drug test will be testing for the ingredients of the benzodiazepines, not the drug it came from. a much more advance and expensive test would be required to determine if it came from xanax, koltipin or Valium because they are all benzodiazepines. This came from a doctor.
No. Ativan is a Benzodiazepine, not a Barbitiurate. That said, Benzodiazepines, like Barbiturates are Schedule IV drugs - meaning it can and probably will be screened for in drug tests.
Does oxcarbazepine show up as benzodiazepines?
Having Ativan in your system will cause the result of a urine drug test to show up as positive for benzodiazepines, which is what Valium would do. So yes, they would show up in the same way.
Ativan would show up on a drug test that is testing for benzodiazepines.
No. Anti-Psychotics don't show up as Benzodiazepines in a drug test.
Any narcotic with a pure opiate base will show up on a drug screen. So, yes, it will be positive for opiates. Xanax is not a narcotic. However, it will show positive for benzodiazepines (Same family as valium.)
As Benzodiazepines AKA Benzos
yes
no they will not show up on drug tests
No. Antidepressants will not show up on standard drug tests. However some commonly used drug tests will detect tricyclic antidepressants (TCA's), an older class of antidepressants. Since antidepressants (including TCA's) are not addictive or controlled substances there is rarely a need to test for them. It is technically possible to test for any drug but employer, military, home, and hospital drug tests will not test for them (although some home drug tests and hospital tests will find TCA's). A class of drugs known as benzodiazepines (Valium, Xanax, Ativan, Klonopin/Rivotril, Serax, Restoril) are often incorrectly described as antidepressants. These drugs are often tested for due to their potential for abuse, however most drug tests only test for PCP, cocaine, amphetamines (including meth and ecstasy), opiates (codeine, morphine, and heroin), and THC (marijuana). Benzodiazepines, barbiturates, and oxycodone are the most common tests added to the basic 5-panel test. If any drug were to show up on a drug test you would not have a problem if you can provide a valid prescription.