The answer is no. While buprenorphine is much more powerful than hydrocodone, it is a partial agonist meaning it will bind to the receptors in your brain and lock in, not allowing any other opiates to react until the buprenorphine has worn off. Combined with a buprenorphine tolerance, it may take individuals as long as 5-7 days before they can actually feel the analgesic effects of other opiates, as buprenorphine has a slightly longer half life than other known prescription opiate painkillers.
Buprenorphine is stronger than Dihydrocodeine but many people do not appreciate dihydrocodeine is a very strong painkiller.A 5mg dose buprenorphine is way to high for pain relief and doses as high as this are normally only used in addiction treatment in the form of 2mg or 8mg Subutex or Suboxone tablets.For pain relief buprenorphine is prescribed in microgram doses of 0.2mg.
No.
No.
I'm doing it and it hasn't killed me yet.
It would appear that the answer would be no to that.
Codeine phosphate is a weaker opioid compared to dihydrocodeine, meaning dihydrocodeine is more potent. Both are used for pain relief, but dihydrocodeine is typically prescribed for moderate to severe pain, while codeine phosphate is often used for milder pain or as a cough suppressant.
NO....unless you want immediate precipitated withdrawals
Such questions should be asked of your doctor.
No
Yes. Buprenorphine is an opiate.
it has dihydrocodeine
Dihydrocodeine