Yes, approximately 3-4 times stronger
Yes, approximately 3-4 times stronger
Hydromorphone is between 5 and 8 times stronger than morphine
Hydromorphone (Dilaudid) is roughly ten times more potent than morphine sulfate. The Hydromorphone (Dilaudid) worked MUCH better for me for pain than morphine did but the "narcotic effect" with dilaudid is very intense so be careful doing stuff like driving until you know how it affects you if you get that prescribed to you.Knowledge based on: 10 years of pain medications...a lot of different ones!
Morphine and morphine sulfate are essentially the same drug, as morphine sulfate is simply a specific formulation of morphine, where the morphine is combined with sulfate to enhance its solubility and absorption. Therefore, morphine itself is not stronger than morphine sulfate; they have the same analgesic potency. The strength and effectiveness depend more on the dosage and the specific formulation rather than the chemical name.
Hydrocodone is Vicodin with Tylenol. Hydromorphone (aka Dilaudid) is straight Hydromorphone. No Tylenol or any other OTC meds mixed in. Obviously, Hydromorphone is much stronger. It is said that it is stronger than Oxycontin.
hydromorphone is 6-8 times stronger than morphine
quick and precise
Totally different drugs. Morphine is an opiate and Robaxin is a skeletal muscle relaxer. Yes, Morhine is much stronger!
A milligram of hydromorphine (brand name dilaudid) is approximately 5-7 times stronger than a milligram of morphine. Thus 1 mg of hydromorphone is more effective at treating pain and more likely to have side effects, such as respiratory depression than the same dose of morphine. People should be started on lower doses of hydromophone than morphine for initial pain management. However, once the relative strengths are taken into account, hydromorphone is about as likely to cause respiratory depression as morphine.
What is stronger 200mg morphine sulphate or 30mg of hydro morpho
Hydromorphone is a semi-synthetic derivative of morphine. The brand name drug is Dilaudid. Hydromorphone is approximately 6-8 times more potent than morphine. Many hospitals have begun using hydromorphone in the ER instead of morphine because of its easier side effect profile.
I'll assume you mean "DILAUDID." Yes, both are mu-opioid agonists and work in a similar fashion. Typically, dilaudid (hydromorphone) is more efficacious (stronger) than morphine, but tends to last for shorter time. A patient that is in moderate pain may be given, for example: * 10mg Morphine Sulfate every 6 hours by I.M. injection * 2mg hydromorphine HCl, PRN (as needed) for breakthrough pain, by I.M. injection. In this instance, the doctors are using morphine to cover the pain in 6 hour blocks of time, while using the hydromorphone as needed for any pain that still remains.