No
they are both opiates but if its a lab and your positive for opiates they will test for the exact one.
opiates
Yes, Fentanyl will show up if they ask the lab to look for it or drugs of its category (opiates).
In a dip test it will just show as opiates. In a lab test they can distinguish the difference
Tylenol 3 (codiene) will test positive for opiates on a quick panel urine test. But, on the detailed GC/MS test done in a lab, Tylenol 3 will show up as codiene. In otherwords, opiates show up as positive on the quick test. And, when sent to be tested in the lab, they show up detailed to exactly what medication caused the opiate positive.
No, Fentanyl will show up as an opiate and methadone will only show up as methadone because it is synthetic and requires its own test to detect it.
If you do not have a prescription for the percocet then yes, it is bad. It will show up as opiates until it is sent to a lab for further more detailed testing, where it will them show up as percocet.
Neither of them do. Flexeril is cyclobenzaprine, a muscle relaxer, and Tramadol is a fully synthetic drug which acts like an opioid but is not actually an opiate/opioid. There is a big misconception that Tramadol will show positive on a drug test. Depending on what type of test is used, for example, a home test may show a false positive, whereas a lab test will show negative.
no morphine does not show up in a hair follicle test Yes, any basic drug tests test for "opiates" and will detect morphine. Opiates are one of the "SAMHSA-5". The five drugs tested for in the standard NIDA approved drug test- urine, hair or saliva.
opiates are made from poopy seeds therefor if you eat poppy seeds you will test positive on the test strips because the test strips just activate if there is any detecion of an opiod while the lab can take a closer look and tell the diffrance between a drug and what it is made from
No because it does not metabolize in your urine. These tests are meant to detect metabolites in your urine for what ever drug they are searching for, thus, it can't be detected since it does not metabolize
Percocet is a combination of Oxycodone and Tylenol; Vicodin is a brand name for Hydrocodone. While both are similar, Oxycodone is the stronger of the 2, and both will show on a test as an opiate.