Medication in your blood.. there are a few that i am familiar with such is steroids for people who suffer fromeczema and the doctors injected them with steroids another is long-term medication such as .. kidney failure, high blood pressure, high cholesterol pills etc... I'm a eczema sufferer and I've been jabbed a few times with the steroid and since i was born with eczema, i will have to apply the steroid cream too. The only way to force such medication out of the blood and body is through the antioxidants. The antioxidants will force the medication out from the body through the skin. In fact, when the body is trying to get rid of toxic in the blood, it usually force out through the skin. This will often result in the skin showing inflammation or dry and crusty feeling. This can be seen my eczema sufferers. When we sweat and do sport, our body automatically detox itself, thus people with eczema who uses long term steroid creams when they do sports and sweat, their skin gets red and some areas the skin may flare up. Antioxidants is one of the most highly proven natural substance found in many food that has the ability to detoxify the blood and has healing properties to many skin problems. i hoped i hav help you much:D r.cooper(yay!)
Narcotics for pain are in prescribed medications. They are a highly controlled substance and you cannot get any without a prescription and they are usually mixed with other pain killers and are called mixed-opiates.
Uhm, Im not sure I really understand your question and its context, but with what I have here my answer is of course NO. Methadone is a long-acting opiate used for pain management and for detoxing from other opiates. So of course it will not clean out your system because it is putting an opiate into your system. It also makes you very constitpated (as do many other opiates) so my guess is that it actually does the opposite of clean your system out.
one pump clean blood and the other makes the dirty/used blood clean again.
Narcotics is the name for a catagorie of drugs. Particularly those that come from the poppy plant better known by the name Opiates. Any types of opiate is considered a narcotic. Drugs like opium, heroin, oxyconten, methadone, morphine, are just a few examples of narcotic drugs. Some are synthetic and some natural opiates that have been altered to create different drugs with different affects. As you can see there are some pain killers that are considered to be narcotics. Not all pain killers are narcotics because this depends souly on what they are made with. All narcotic drus are addicting and put you at risk of addiction as well as several other health problems.
Three days after you stop taking them, same as any other narcotics.
These are narcotics that are made inside a laboratory. They can include pain medications and other medicines that are approved by the FDA.
This list is including synthetic opiates/opioids, but not opiates that have no euphoric or analgesic properties. Opium Codeine Morphine Tramadol (Ultram) Methadone Buprenorphine (Subutex) Propoxyphene (Darvocet) Pethidine (Demerol) Hydrocodone (Lortab/Vicodin) Oxycodone (Percocet, Oxycontin) Hydromorphone (Dilaudid) Oxymorphone (Opana) Fentanyl Heroin (diacetylmorphine) There are some opiates/oids that do not have any of the normal qualities of opiates like pain relief and a high (an example of this is loperamide, the active ingredient in Imodium. It is an opium derivative, but doesn't have many common characteristics that most other opiates have). Ones such as that are not on this list.
is it correct that heroin becomes indistingisable from other opiates after one day
No, the heart and other organs do that as part of the usual circulation.
Depends on the narcotic. Many narcotics are currently legal - with tobacco being the most popular. Many other narcotics are available with a prescription for pain killers and other uses.
4-7 days
Many pills that are considered pain killers are opiates. For example, Vicodin, Demerol, Codeine, Hydrocodone, Heroin, Lorcet and Methadone are all considered to be opiates.