Oipiod Oipiod
A narcotic, in the traditional sense, includes opiates and opioid medications. Tramadol is an opioid medication, so, yes, tramadol is a narcotic. It does not contain any other narcotic medications.
No. It is, along with pethidine, the chemical name for Demerol, a completely separate synthetic narcotic.
They are two different types of narcotic pain reliever.
"EXEMPT NARCOTICS" is a term is used to generally describe those Over-the-Counter (OTC) medications, that contain low-level dosages of narcotic and narcotic-type drugs. They are dispensed without prescription but the purchaser MUST sign a register in order to receive delivery of them (e.g.- Paregoric, or codeine-based cough syrup).
No, they are not. They both contain a narcotic analgesic combined with the nonnarcotic analgesic acetaminophen (Tylenol). Lortab contain hydrocodone and acetaminophen and Tylenol #3 contain codeine and acetaminophen. A drug test would screen for both codeine and hydrocodone.
No medications bought over the counter, meaning without a prescription, contain codeine. Codeine is a controlled substance and any medication containing it must have a doctor's written order. It is possible for Midol to have codeine in prescription strength but I have not heard of it.
The short answer: absolutely not, nor a 'narcotic' per say. Its intended for use as a sleep aid, not a pain killer. Also, morphine and codeine are much different. Morphine is significantly stronger that plain codeine.
pain medications The above is correct. Codeine is an opioid that is used to block pain. However codeine is also used in medications as a cough suppressant. It can also be used for chronic diarrhea.
I'm unaware of any formulation which contains both tramadol and codeine, nor can I think of any real benefit to doing so. They're both opioid analgesics and do pretty much the same thing, so there's little point in combining them.
no..percacet contains acetaminophen and oxycodone
Yes.
no