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No they are both opiates
The biggest difference is that Dilaudid is a synthetic opiate, whereas Percocet (Oxycodone and Tylenol combination) is a natural morphine derivative. Percocet is also generally stronger on the opiate scale.
No, dilaudid will show up as an opiate and methadone will only show up as methadone because it requires its own specific test.
Nah
M-Eslon is long acting morphine, which would probably be the primary pain killer for severe pain, while msir stands for morphine sulphate immediate release, which generally is used for breakthrough pain
no
There isn't really a difference, the both get you feeling rickity ross
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.
The spelling!
the numbers 2 & 3
Yes. If tested to that extent, the two will show up differently. Heroin is diacetylmorphine which breaks down into morphine and will show up on a drug test as the metabolites of morphine. Hydrocodone has its own separate metabolites including hydromophone (Dilaudid), hydrocodol, and several others.
Stannous sulphate: SnSO4 Nickel sulphate: NiSO4.6H2O