Yes
The terms opiate and opioid have similar, yet slightly different, meanings. Properly, opiates are only narcotic analgesics derived from the opium poppy (codeine and morphine). Opioids are narcotic analgesics that have similar activity to opiates (heroin, oxycodone, fentanyl, methadone, etc.) Thus, hydrocodone is an opioid, not an opiate. However, these words are increasingly being used interchangeably, and some would now consider them to be synonymous.
Morphine is generally kept locked up in hospitals. Pharmacies do not normally carry morphine. Morphine is a controlled substance because it is derived from or emulates the same opioid source that heroin comes from.
codiene will have no effect if you are taking morphine - morphine in value exceeds morphine by 1/1000
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.
Narcotics such as morphine do not cause rage, they are depressants. Of course, a morphine addict might become enraged if he or she was not able to obtain morphine. So, morphine could be an indirect cause of rage.
is gabapentin morphine
morphine have cocaine in it
No, morphine is not a barbiturate.
Eduard Levinstein has written: 'Die Morphiumsucht' -- subject(s): Morphine Dependence, Morphine abuse 'Morbid craving for morphia' -- subject(s): Morphine Dependence, Morphine abuse 'Morbid craving for morphia' -- subject(s): Morphine abuse 'Morbid craving for morphia' -- subject(s): Morphine Dependence, Morphine abuse 'Die Morphiumsucht' -- subject(s): Morphine Dependence, Morphine abuse
which is stronger morphine 5 or morphine 60
Yes, codeine is methylated morphine.
morphine sulphate