Propofol is widely used and widely approved in human and venternary medicine, with 50 countries last count certifying it. Fast acting, and fast metabolizing, it has a wide range of uses and few shortcomings. Not viable for infants.
Propofol is not a naturally occurring substance in the human body.
Propofol, it looks like milk and is a general anesthetic.
Yes, and it is commonly used to maintain anesthetic plane in small animals for short procedures.
Three common street names for propofol are "milk" due to its white, creamy appearance, "Michael Jackson juice," referencing the pop star's use of the drug, and "Diprivan," which is its brand name. These names reflect its characteristics and associations within popular culture. Propofol is primarily used as an anesthetic in medical settings, but its misuse can lead to serious health risks.
My mom keeps telling me to use propofol.
NO
No, propofol is only administered in operating rooms by trained anesthesiologists.
Propofol is a liquid, NOT a tablet. It can only be administered intravenously.
Propofol is NOT a drug! It's anesthesia used in hospital operating rooms.
Diprivan, also known as Propofol, is an anesthetic typically used to produce general anesthesia or sedation.Source: http://www.lifelinetomodernmedicine.com/ArticlePage.aspx?ID=c6c83d4c-438c-41ff-a0a5-ca93bc365929&LandingID=fc6eb1da-98e4-43c7-bb9f-09c17e2a005d
Diprivan, also known as Propofol, is an anesthetic typically used to produce general anesthesia or sedation. Source: http://www.lifelinetomodernmedicine.com/ArticlePage.aspx?ID=c6c83d4c-438c-41ff-a0a5-ca93bc365929&LandingID=fc6eb1da-98e4-43c7-bb9f-09c17e2a005d
One to three days. Propofol, you'll be happy to hear, is not a controlled substance so they don't test for it - in very large part because very few people try getting high off it. It is VERY tricky to take propofol; it has what we drug fans call a "very narrow therapeutic index" - IOW the effective dose and the lethal dose are not that far apart.