Usually not. Hydromorphone (dilaudid) usually needs to be tested for separately and will not trigger most opiate tests.
You probably meant Morphine sulfate, I hope. Morphine base is not very water soluble. By combining morphine base with a dilute strong acid, you are creating a salt, such as Morphine Hydrochloride (from hydrochloric acid), or Morphine sulfate (from sulfuric acid) and many more. It is a fairly water soluble chemical that is used in hospitals, either for injection, oral pills or even a suppository,
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.
Heroin is a semi-synthetic opiate. It is specifically categorized in the sub-class of morphine-derivatives; and even further still, it is of the morphine 3,6-diester class. But generally speaking, it is categorized as an opioid(which, for medical purposes include natural opiates found in opium such as morphine & codeine; semi-synthetic opiates which are synthesized from natural opium-alkaloids--which includes heroin; and synthetic opiates--or opioids--such as fentanyl and hydromorphone which are able to be synthesized without the use of naturally occurring opium alkaloids like codeine or morphine).To further prove this point- heroin's chemical name is diacetyl-morphine and quite obvious by its name- it is very similar in its psychoactivity to morphine, although it is more lipid soluble, allowing it to penetrate the brain and fatty-tissues more quickly. This results in a higher "rush" type feeling (which is usually associated with more addiction potential).
No, sulfate and sulfa are different. Sulfate refers to a mineral salt of sulfuric acid, while sulfa, short for sulfonamide, is an antibiotic medication. There is no direct relationship between the two.
3-4 days to get out of your system if your going in for a drug test of some sort it will not show up. If you are taking MS Contin by prescription, just take the bottle with your current prescription. If you are taking it recreationally, yeah, go ahead and take the other person's advice .
Hydromorphone is a semi-synthetic derivative of morphine. The brand name drug is Dilaudid. Hydromorphone is approximately 6-8 times more potent than morphine. Many hospitals have begun using hydromorphone in the ER instead of morphine because of its easier side effect profile.
Narcan
No they are both opiates
Yes. A generic drug for morphine is your mum.
no opana is oxymorphhone, or oxy-morphine
hydromorphone is 6-8 times stronger than morphine
No, Hydromorphone (Dilaudid) does not show up in the basic opiate test which is part of the standard drug test. The opiate tests look for morphine (which both codeine and heroin break down into). Hydromorphone does not break down into morphine. But also hydromorphone can be detected with a simple drug test.
No. Only morphine and hydromorphone (Dilaudid) will break down into the same compound. Demerol reduces to norperidine after it is metabolized.
You probably meant HYDROMORPHONE, which is a drug very similar to morphine, except it takes less of it to get the same effects as morphine.
yes
Morphine sulfate is a opioid analgesic. It is used to relieve pain and is considered a narcotic. It blocks the pain sensors from the central nervous system.
It stands for Morphine Sulfate, which is the name of the drug.