Tylenol™ is the trade name for Johnson & Johnson Company's preparation of acetaminophen. It is not an opiate, and it does not show up as an opiate on drug tests.
No, Tylenol is NOT an opiate.
Roxys are made out of oxycodone, which is an opiate, and acetaminophen, which is Tylenol. Roxys show up as opiates.
Yes. Hydrocodone will show up an an opiate. Hydrocodone/Vicodin is an opiate with tylenol. Hope that helps/
No.
Tylenol 3 (codiene) will test positive for opiates on a quick panel urine test. But, on the detailed GC/MS test done in a lab, Tylenol 3 will show up as codiene. In otherwords, opiates show up as positive on the quick test. And, when sent to be tested in the lab, they show up detailed to exactly what medication caused the opiate positive.
Yes. It will show up as an opiate.
no It would actually show up as an opiate on a drug test.
On a drug test Vicodin (Hydrocodone) will show up as an Opiate, it is an Opiate.
Yes, the active ingredient in Tussionex is Hydrocodone which shows up as an opiate on drug tests.
No they will not show as the same thing. Xanax is a benzodiazapine (sp?) and the codeine in Tylenol 3 is an opiate. The benzodiazapine isn't something that is "normally" tested for in a job urine test but it can definatly be detected in in a urine test that is looking for it.
Lorcet will show up on a drug test as an opiate because it contains a synthetic opiate, hydrocodone.
Yes - it is an opiate and will show up on standard opiate screens.