Yes and then likely send you to hospital for overdose. If you have never taken morphine before that is way too much for a starting dose-unless you are well overweight-like 300lbs or more.
Doses usually START at 1MG OR 2 MG. every 4 hrs etc
15 mg is for someone who has tolerance to the drug and requires a higher dose.
Dont take it because if you do pass out and then vomit-which is usually what happens when the body is introdcued to something it cannot handle it tries to purge the offending matter. Then when you vomit in your stupor sleep state pray it doesnt go in your lungs and drown you.
It would depend on how much morphine the child took but assuming you are talking about an adult dose, the child could go into a coma or die.
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
high fowler's position
Most definitely not. I would never try mixing medications without contacting your doctor or pharmacist first. Some drugs are extremely fatal if mixed. Don't do it- Do you really want to be known as the person that died of an erection?
sure can. it tastes like crap though. if you are a smoker i would crush up maybe 10 mg or so and roll it with tabbaco. or sprinkle it on some grass and hit it out of a pipe
"Sleepy" would be an adjective as it is a descriptive word.
200 grams of morphine would kill anyone who took it. Morphine is usually administered in miligram quantities, example: 6mg of morphine intravenously is a strong dose.
If the morphine dose is 200 mg, then the tablet must be a time-released formulation of morphine such as Duramorph®, Kadian®, MS-Contin®, OramorphSR® and about four other brands of sustained-release morphine sulfate available in the US. This matters because the blood morphine concentration will not begin to decrease until the pill stops releasing morphine into the person's blood. For most people who aren't elderly, a single morphine dose will not be detected in the urine after roughly 72 hours. It is necessary to add 24 hours to that if a single dose of a sustained-release formulation is taken, thus a single dose of 200 mg of morphine in a sustained-release tablet would probably not be detected in the urine after 96 hours. However, if one uses the medication every day, or has used it for more than approximately three days in a row, then that person's urine will most likely be "clean" after about 120 hours, or five whole days.
you mean gastric/duodenal ulcers? They are usually caused by a bacteria (H.Pylori) however they can also be caused by taking excessive amounts of non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs like acetaminophen (Tylenol) which often accompanies opiate pain killer drugs like morphine sulfate. I was just reading an article, published in '07 Supportive Oncology,which was describing use of Morphine Sulfate topical gel as an effective pain control method for ulcers on the epidermis. I wonder if it would be good for gastric ulcers too.
They are chemically very similar, an enzyme urine test (basic preliminary test) should show urine with any of those as positive for opiates/opioids. Usually a positive test is confirmed by GC/MS which could probably differentiate hydrocodone, morphine, and oxycodone.
Sodium Sulfate is a basic substance.
Copper sulfate would crystalize as blue crystals, water would evaporate. To get the copper sulfate itself to evaporate you would need to heat it, melting the dry crystals then vaporizing them.