There are a long list of opiates, but here are a few popular ones:
morphine
hydrocodone
oxycodone
tramadol
tizanidine
codeine
vicodin
valium
methadone
fentanyl
merperidine
Morphine shows up as opiates. Because all opiates convert to morphine once they get into your system, the test is just named "opiates."
Morphine shows up as opiates. In the body, all opiates besides morphine are actually prodrugs--drugs that turn into something else, and what they turn into is morphine.
Vicodin shows up under opiates because it has hydrocodone in it which is an opiate
Yes. They both shows up the same - as opiates (same as heroin)
The answer to your question is YES, Oxycodone Liquid or pill form shows up on any standard drug test as an Opiate, some test can show the amount of opiate however most standard drug screenings don't. Others like Codeine, Vicoden, Percocet and even suboxone all are opiate based drugs that will show definitively positive for Opiates.
Opana will show up as oxycodone and opiates (more widely known as morphine). OxyContin shows up as oxycodone.
yes, if you have incoming drug test and no Rx you can run a home opiates drug test and see are you good to go.
It shows up as Morphine (Opiates) Once it is metabolized. Side note: Cough syrup with codiene (r Tylenol III) hat has been completely metabolized also shows as morphine. It may be detectable in the urine up to 48 hours post dose.
None..! Cocaine is a tropane alkaloid, only cocaine shows up as cocaine on a drug screening. The medications used for pain (opiates or the synthetic opioids) will show up as just that, opioids.. Most opiates show up as morphine metabolites. Standard drug tests for opiates also test for the metabolites of other commonly abused opiates (diacetylmorphine (heroin), oxycodone, hydromorphone, codeine metabolites, etc.)
No. Hydrocodone and Oxycodone are two different narcotic analgesics. Oxycodone usually shows up by itself. It's usually tested for specifically. Where as Hydrocodone will usually show up as an "opiate" but not specifically Hydrocodone.
to prevent withdraw from opiates. and yes, it gets you high.
Heroin shows up as opiates - all opiates become morphine when you take them. Dilaudid is an opioid - a synthetic opiate. ("Natural" opiates like morphine are made out of the sap of opium poppies.) It used to be that opiate tests didn't catch opioids...but now everyone uses an "expanded opiate" test that looks for both.