what can i take to show the same as dilaudid on a lab test
30 mg of Morphine IR is equal to approximately 8 mg of Diluadid, so there is about a 4mg morphine to 1 mg of dilaudid ratio. So 45 mg of morphine would be equal to 5.6 mg of dilaudid. To answer your question, 45 mg of Morphine IR would stronger than taking the 4 mg of dilaudid.
no
No. Only morphine and hydromorphone (Dilaudid) will break down into the same compound. Demerol reduces to norperidine after it is metabolized.
Oxycodone is a narcotic drug with no acetaminophin or Ibprofrin. Dilaudid is not mixed with anything. Dilaudid is also stronger than morphine, as is Oxycodone. 5mg dilaudid is equivalent to approx. 40mg of morphine. Do not take any drug unless ordered by a doctor, as either drug can cause severe problems if taken improperly. Oxycodone is an immediate release drug where Oxycontin is the same as Oxycodone but as a time release.
nope Edit: It all depends on what panel test you are taking. There are 5, 7, and 9 (?) I believe...Cocaine will show up on all of them, morphine as well on all of them, but dilaudid will only start to show up on the 7 and 9 panel screens. It is a synthetic form and goes deeper than just the morphine on the opiates in the 5 panel
No, Hydromorphone (Dilaudid) does not show up in the basic opiate test which is part of the standard drug test. The opiate tests look for morphine (which both codeine and heroin break down into). Hydromorphone does not break down into morphine. But also hydromorphone can be detected with a simple drug test.
Usually not. Hydromorphone (dilaudid) usually needs to be tested for separately and will not trigger most opiate tests.
Dilaudid is an opioid and an analgesic. When a person takes this and is drug tested it will show up as an opiate.
Opiates --- yes
Dilaudid is from the opioid family of medications. It will show up as a positive result for opioids or narcotics. Other drugs which will generate the same result are morphine, heroin, fentanyl, percocet.
I'll assume you mean "DILAUDID." Yes, both are mu-opioid agonists and work in a similar fashion. Typically, dilaudid (hydromorphone) is more efficacious (stronger) than morphine, but tends to last for shorter time. A patient that is in moderate pain may be given, for example: * 10mg Morphine Sulfate every 6 hours by I.M. injection * 2mg hydromorphine HCl, PRN (as needed) for breakthrough pain, by I.M. injection. In this instance, the doctors are using morphine to cover the pain in 6 hour blocks of time, while using the hydromorphone as needed for any pain that still remains.
no