there are many myths. somethings work for some people but not others. you should have quit if you knew you were getting tested.
NO
Bacteria are gram positive and gram negative (which means if you apply Gram stain to them, they either pick up the color (positive) or they do not (negative). Entamoeba Hystolytica is not a bacteria, it is a protozoa (one celled organism) that usually causes diarrhea and can be diagnosed from a stool sample and treated with drugs.
a
if the result is negative then they took drugs and if it is positive then they are clean
It depends on how the first sample was tested. If the first half was tested on a dipstick test and you KNOW you haven't been doing drugs--say, you're taking naproxen sodium for knee pain and you come up positive for marijuana (naproxen cross-reacts with the THC test), testing the split sample with GC/MS should clear you. OTOH, if you smoke weed and your first sample came up positive on GC/MS, assume the split sample will also be positive.
It means theres nothing in your pee like drugs.
Unfairly saying negative. Umm..."negative" means there's no drugs in you. If you really meant "unfairly saying positive," you can request they send a sample to a different lab.
Chronotropic drugs are drugs which affect the heart rate. Positive chronotropic drugs increase heart rate, and negative chronotropic drugs decrease heart rate.
Turkesterone is not tested positive for drugs. As we know, turkesterone belongs to the family of ecdysteroids like ecdysterone. ICPS ordered such analysis of ecdysterone to the Antidope Centre in Moscow. The conclusion was that ecdysterone is not tested positive for drugs. In addition, to test turkesterone, testing lab needs to have the standart referral sample of turkesterone with a purity not less than 98% and without any impurities. Since, ICPS is the only institute who has such sample, we can be sure that turkesterone won't be tested positive for drugs.
Split sample drug test? It depends.If what you're asking is, "I was positive because I was doing drugs; are the drugs going to leave my sample after 19 days?" the answer is that you'll still be positive. They freeze the second part of your sample, so there's no way anything could get out of it--and the drug metabolites in the sample wouldn't leave the sample anyway.If, OTOH, you're asking "I got a false positive for grass because I was taking ibuprofen (Advil is famous for crossreacting with THC on dip-stick tests, which is one of the reasons I hate dip-stick tests); should I have the second sample tested?" go for it. If they test the second sample on GC/MS, which is the normal way for split-sample tests, it will be able to tell the difference between Advil and weed.
The screen threshold is the amount, usually milligrams per deciliter (mg/dL) of sample, that must be present in a specific lab specimen for the test to return a positive. Usually the screen threshold for a drug test is high, meaning drugs or drug metabolites must be present in great amount for the test to return positive. The result is that many drug tests come back negative although the sample does in fact contain drugs or drug metabolites. Any positive specimen is then analyzed by lab machine which detects almost any trace amount of drugs or drug metabolites.
just do drugs, and drink... alot