Yes they will. The metabolites will show for 3-4 days after use.
No, hydromorphone hydrochloride breaks down into morphine and to it subsequent metabolites. Vicodine metabolites and antibodies are slightly different. Unfortunatly those differences are within the existing sciences capabilities to detect.
Opiate(s), drug and metabolites, each procedure
All drugs (even street drugs) break down into metabolites. Drug tests focus primarily on these particular metabolites. If present, it proves that drug was consumed because those particular metabolites do not appear naturally in the body and can only occur after the ingestion of the related drug.
CONCLUSION. Because naloxone hydrochloride is structurally similar to oxymorphone and its metabolites are excreted in human urine over several days, its potential to cause a false-positive opiate screen on standard urine drug screens is of concern.
The metabolites and unchanged drug that are passed in the urine.
Oxycodone is an opioid; heroin is an opiate. Both will show as opiate drugs on standard employment type random drug tests. But there are other types of tests that differentiates between opiates, and opioids, and also the levels of the metabolites of these in the urine, showing how much a person is using.
yes. it is a opiate.
Most opiate drug tests test specifically for morphine, codeine, and their metabolites. Heroin, for instance, breaks down into morphine. Fentanyl does not break down into these metabolites, therefore it is not detected in a standard opiate screen.
Pretty much everything (or rather, the metabolites of it) will show up in urine.
This will show up as an opiate on a urine drug screen.
Drug test to check for methadone metabolites in urine
Lorcet will show up as an opiate on a urine drug test.