The conversion of oral hydromorphone (Opana, Numorphone) to an initial patch dose of 75mcg/hr (skewed toward the lower end) is 28.1-39 mg/day.
There is no fentanyl in a lidocaine patch. It is a lidocaine patch not a fentanyl patch.
YES...fentanyl is much stronger.
200 mcg of fentanyl is the equivalent of 400 milligrams methadone
Not so much affected to stomach. from patch fentanyl directly goes to the blood with out stomach.
$100.00 per patch?
It depends entirely on the person. I could do a lot. I do a lot of opiates. You probably can't, if you need to ask. Fentanyl is a very powerful drug. Be careful.
yes, very much so!
You don't want to have Fentanyl ;) only when you need it, then it will make you sick for a day but pain free! or at least diminished to bearable. I take 1/2 of 75mcg every 3rd day and just nod on the2nd day. It makes my separated shoulder tolerable until it can be repaired in a few weeks. I've been using these patches for several months now in different strenghs and have finally figured them out for me. when pain becomes constant and almost unbearable I dose up and await the next couple of days
Unable to answer. Nothing is known of the offense, or the past history of the defendant.
Yes - Tylenol 3 doesn't have a fraction of the painkilling ability that Fentanyl does, but it does work better on some areas of the brain that Fentanyl and similar opiates don't (e.g., migraines). Like any combination though, even though you're opiate tolerant just using Fentanyl, you need to be aware of any increased side effects, especially respiratory depression.
2 mg The previous answer is incorrect. Fentanyl can be fatal in doses less than a milligram, and is usually measured and dispensed on the microgram scale. Depending on opiate tolerance and body mass, fentanyl can cause respiratory depression on a wide scale of doses. For this reason, it is an extremely dangerous drug, and is restricted to hospital use in sedation and pain management, and in rare outpatient circumstances where patients have become too opiate competent/tolerant, and require fentanyl, usually delivered as a lozenge, such as Actiq, or in a patch, such as Duragesic.
Because the sea water replaces the old water...