Johnson & Johnson, however, remember Tylenol is just a trade mark used for the drug acetaminophen. other companies can make it its not patented
Purdue pharmacies makes the tablets that have OC imprinted on them. theres a very common misconception that OC is the band name which it isnt
Watson Pharmaceuticals
endo pharmacutials.
norco
watson
Norco is one brand name for the drug hydrocodone. Hydrocodone is a Schedule 3 drug in the US.
Norco is one brand name for the drug hydrocodone. Hydrocodone is a Schedule 3 drug in the US.
Norco is not considered an anti-inflammatory drug. It is a combination of hydrocodone and acetaminophen and is used to relieve pain.
Norco is a very large north American Bicycle company, it is also a pain relieving drug and the name of two cities, one in Louisiana and one in California.
It is a norco 10/325 codeine tablet! Pain reliever! Brand name drug for hydrocodone w/ APAP!
Norco is a Schedule 3 (III) drug, meaning that is has less potential for abuse than drugs in Schedules 1 or 2. It has an accepted medical use in the US and is typically used to treat pain. It is a combination of acetaminophen and hydrocodone.
http://wiki.answers.com/norco/norco.html® (http://wiki.answers.com/hydrocodone-apap/hydrocodone-apap.html) is a prescription pain medication. Because it contains a narcotic, Norco is likely to cause constipation. Although you may avoid this side effect if you take Norco for just a few days (or if you only take it occasionally), the majority of people who take the drug will develop some degree of constipation.
Vicodin and Norco are the same medications. Both contain the active drug called Hydrocodone.
Norco, is hydrocodone with 325mg of Tylenol (Acetaminophen). The CDL test or DOT( Dept. of Transportation) test urine for opiates among other things. If you do not have a prescription for hydrocodone, you will be flagged. I would recommend you do not take any urine test for a period of at least 5 days after your last dose of Hydrocodone. At that point, you should be clean.
Vicoden (this is the correct spelling) is a combination of acetaminophen and hydrocodone. Norco is also comprised of the same combination of drugs, but in different ratios. The only way it would be distinguishable would be by the difference in the levels of each acetaminophen and hydrocodone in your body, which could vary by your bodies metabolism of them. So ultimately, yes, a drug test would not be able to distinguish with 100% certainty which drug was taken by the individual being tested.
I was previously prescribed suboxone and therefor recognize it has a drug called naloxone in it which is a narcotic antagonist or drug that mixed with opiates such as hydrocodone which is in the norco pill and can cause immediate withdrawal effect.