It depends entirely on your opiate tolerance. In emergency situations, a person who is not a chronic opiate user, the dose is usually from 1 to five mg. repeated as needed. If you are a chronic user, the dose can be up to 1gm (1000mg) depending on your tolerance.
2mg
morphine requirement will increase with regular use and safe dose will depend on weight and general health a safe daily dose is nil.
is it safe to take 5 mg dose of morhine with a flexeral
is it safe to take st johns wort with morphine
Is it safe to take morphine pills 2 years after expiration date?
After morphine you may not need diazepam at all. Morphine is very much dangerous drug and diazepam is very safe drug. Morphine has to be used very carefully and diazepam can be used almost routinely in today's world of lot of psychological tensions.
Perfect euphoria in my opinion, it shouldn't be dangerous either since the morphine was prescribed by my doctor for my degenerative spine disks and the Ritalin was prescribed so I wouldn't sleep so much from the morphine. Try 30mg of morphine and 20mg of Ritalin intranasal.
Start with 5g and work your way up. The high lasts for a while and is generally considered unpleasant. Be safe.
Absolutely NOT.
No it isn't safe. Taking anything past the experation date is unsafe
yes
"Human lethal dose by ingestion is 120-250 mg/kg of morphine sulfate." that is an estimate as there are many different conflicting numbers. It depends on route of administration (oral, intramuscular, or intravenous), and it also depends on the tolerance of the user. Someone who has been injecting morphine 3 times a day for 2 weeks will require a higher lethal dose than someone who has not injected morphine in years. Basically.. I wouldn't try it if you enjoy breathing. I can personally assure you that Opiate overdose is no picnic. You slowly fall asleep until you don't wake up.. I woke up, and it didn't feel very good. Be safe!
A millilitre (mL) is a unit of volume. A milligram (mg) is a unit of mass."20 mL" of morphine would imply that the morphine is suspended in a liquid, and depending on morphine's solubility in this liquid and so forth, there can be a different amount of morphine per mL. Usually a liquid suspension like this will be "X mg per mL" or "X mg/mL" as labelled on an ampoule or something similar.For example, you one may find an ampoule that contains 4 mg/mL of morphine (in which case the answer would be 80 mg) or one that contains 20 mg/mL (in which case the answer would be 400 mg), etc.There is no fixed answer, *but* you should know that a morphine dose is measured in mg and not mL, so if all you know is the amount of mL, it's not safe to measure out a dose.