50 mg would kill you dead. No question. The correct dosage you are seeking is 50 mcg, micrograms, instead of milligrams. The difference: 50mcg = .05mg 100mcg = .1mg 1000mcg = 1mg.
It depends on how you take it. I'm finding the most common answer to state potentially up to 3 days or 72 hours but it depends on if its a patch you wear, a patch you're putting in your mouth, or a pill you're eating. WEARING A PATCH ON YOUR SKIN SHOULD BE THE LONGEST DETECTION TIME BECAUSE IT WILL STORE IN YOUR FAT. I MIGHT BE WRONG BUT I THINK ORAL OR IV WOULD BE THE SHORTEST DETECTION TIME.
ULTIMATELY, GO TO A METHADONE CLINIC OR AN NA MEETING AND GET HELP. DON'T WIND UP LIKE I WAS. I'M 2 YEARS CLEAN NEXT MONTH AND I'M HOLDING 2 PATCHES RIGHT NOW AND DEBATING A REAL QUICK RELAPSE.
At least 2 days.
Anywhere from a few weeks, months, or years. It's all dependent on the patient and pain relief requirements.
It depends on the person and how long patches have been used, but in general you'll start feeling withdrawals around 6-8 hours after the patch dose expires. It takes another few days before it's really out of your system. If you've been using Fentanyl for a long time, it'll take days or weeks depending on how much and how long.
24 hours
3 days
What does it matter? You'll probably be dead.
If it is your first patch ever, about 24 to 48 hours. -Jennapsyche.
if you rub it on your gums and are not opiod tolerant; 1-2hrs maxium, re rubbing fentanyl opiod analgesic onto gums.
until you stop breathing.
Absolutely not, unless you are using a Fentanyl patch, such as Duragesic or another brand name for the opiod-based transdermal pain delivery system , in which case, the Fentanyl will remain in your system, as provided by the patch, until about three to five days after you remove the last patch. There is no way for a urine drug test to determine whether the Fentanyl (opiod narcotic) it is detecting is that which was used to relieve your pain in surgery (or what was given to you by the anesthesiologist while you were asleep) or that which is entering your system now from the pain patch, except to say that at nineteen days "post op" nothing given to you in the operating room will still be in your system, so it would have to be something like a pain patch, unless perhaps you were given an injection of Fentanyl into your spinal area, such as an intrathecal injection, meant to linger there in that area and absorb over a period of many days and provide longer term pain relief, but you would certainly have been told and have had to approve a procedure of that sort and would therefore be aware that it was given to you prior to leaving the hospital/surgi-center as a longer-term pain reliever. In that case, a test would identify the Fentanyl in your system at likely many days (not sure how many, it would depend on the dosage and how long the medication was intended to linger there). Hope that helps out.
Depends entirely on the person and how long they've been taking it. The longer it's been taken, the longer it takes to leave. In general though, if another patch isn't put on, around 2-4 days.
72 hours for any pill or liquid drug