Any pain killer will show up as an opiate. This is in the same class as heroin and depending on how in depth your test will go they will be able to tell the exact medication you were taking.
No. They are both opiates but are different drugs. Some people get this confused because of the narcotic called dilaudid which is the brand name for hydromorphone. Hydromorphone is not related to hydrocodone or morphine.
Yes. Morphine & Heroin are very similar chemically. Heroin is typically converted to morphine, once in the body. So most drug tests will look for MORPHINE, only. If that is positive, it could mean the tested person took morphine, codeine or heroin recently. If it is important to determine whether a patient took Morphine or Heroin, a more expensive and more specific test is needed.
If the test is specific for morphine, hydrocodone will not cause a positive test. If however, the test is simply looking for opiates, hydrocodone could cause a positive result.
It will show up as an opiod..it will not be specific as morhine but categorized ..which both are opiods
difference between morphine sa and hydrocodone
Once you understand that the actual drug name of heroin is diamorphine, I think you can understand why they would be similar on a drug test.
No
I'm not sure if the test would specifically test for Hydrocodone, it would most likely test for opiates, which are in both Hydrocodone and Morphine. So in short, yes, if the drug test is testing for opiates in your system, both Hydrocodone and Morphine will cause a positive for opiates.
because hydrocodone is an opiate, it will show up as an opiate in your system. so will codeine, morphine, Oxycontin, and other opiate derivatives.
Morphine, heroin, codeine, hydrocodone, oxycodone, and any other drug that is a derivative of opium.
will morphine show up on stick drug test the same as percoet
I'm assuming you mean Loracet and it depends on the test. The conventional 'opiates' test is usually a test for morphine which will come up dirty only for morphine and heroin (which turns into morphine in your system). Oxycodone and hydrocodone (loracet) will not show up on a morphine test, but due to the prevalence of these drugs lately many 'opiates' tests will detect these as well. You should find out what exactly the 'opiates' test is testing for. If it's only morphine you should be in the clear. Lorcet is correct, and there is lortab and many other drug names for hydrocodone. Not to be offensive, but someone has a screw loose. Hydrocodone is a ketone of codeine. Even codeine shows up as morphine. It metabolizes into 10% morphine, which they believe codeine gets it's pain relief. Hydrocodone will show up as an opiate in a 10 panel drug test, absolutely, trust me on this. Oxycodone will too. It metabolizes into oxymorphone, which metabolizes into morphine. Important questions like these need reliable answers. I have seen some whoopers for answers!
Yes. Hydrocodone is an opiate class drug and will test positive for opiates.
it will show up as morphine. many other opiate drugs (oxycodone, hydrocodone, heroin, etc.) may also show up as morphine see:http://www.erowid.org/psychoactives/testing/testing_info1.shtml
no it will not
anything pertaining to opiates will show up morphine -- hydrocodone---etc
No, the test must be specifically ordered to detect hydrocodone or oxycodone. The DOD drug test does test for opiates (including heroin and morphine) but does not test for medications.
Yes, percocet (Oxycodone Hydrochloride) is an opioid derivative and shows up as an opiate on drug tests, along with Morphine, Dilaudid, Hydrocodone, etc.
Yes, Also the standard drug screen for opiates looks specifically for the presence of either morphine or codeine. And will detect the presence of oxycodone as it cross-reacts with morphine in these tests. But oxycodone does NOT break down into either morphine or codeine. Hydrocodone may not cause a positive result in a standard opiate urine test (hydrocodone does not break down into morphine, and is therefore not detected by these tests). But many will detect hydrocodone (and hydromorphone, which it breaks down into). So for both test results will depend on the particular type of test that is used (new drug test detect synthetic opiates).