strong enought that if your arent opiate tolerant that the lowest dose of the patch will make you overdose, dont be stupid, when it says for opiate tollerent patients only it really facking means it.
Any mcg patch that they make woould be safe for 100lb anyone if worn properly, not chewed up.
You will die! Get some help if this what you are using it for. I have chronic pain and use a fentanyl patch, Norco, methadone just to be able to walk. your an idiot if this is your intent. People like you make it hard for people like me to get these drugs from dr! Get help and please don't eat the patch !
No - the top dosage is 100mcg. To get higher doses, you need to mix lower/higher patch doses to get the effect you need.
This refers to a Fentanyl Transdermal patch, which is commonly used for chronic pain patients like myself that need continuous long-term opiate therapy. It is regulated by body heat, and is extremely effective. There are several doses - 12.5, 25, 50, 75 and 100mcg patches, all of which can be used with one another to make specific dosages. For example, though my normal dose is 100mcg, I typically have to use 200mcg, so I'll use 2 100mcg patches.
Ginger. Safe,natural and won't make you sleepy.
There are no substances in carrots that are known to make people sleepy. So no, carrots will not make you drowsy.
Everyone's different, but in general it takes several hours (especially if you're already opiate tolerant by using OxyContin) for Fentanyl to achieve a dosage equivalent to what you're taking. You want to adjust your patch attachment time so that when your OxyContin dose is going down, the patch dose is ramping up. Your doctor should have already told you this; keep in mind that initial patch doses are skewed toward the low end of the dosage chart for safety, so your initial dose might not cut it. Make sure you've got enough breakthrough meds available until you can get your patch dose correct.
No
No
It does make you sleepy and to make it not sleepy you first should have some moody bread (just a little) then drink some water then go to sleep and see what happens
Fentanyl, like Oxycodone, does not show up on most standard urine screens for opiates due to its chemical makeup, which differ from natural opiates. However, it is detectable in urine and blood, with specialized testing using gas chromatography. Much of the information that has been released concerning Fentanyl and Oxycodone urine testing is inaccurate - read the link below to the Mayo Clinic report which clarifies errors in the record.