It is absorbed by the walls of your stomach once you eat it, from there it passes into the bloodstream and on to the blood/brain barrier( I swear its a real thing lol) then into the brain where it fits into your opiate receptors, along the way the methadone is converted into morphine (most opiates turn into morphine once in the body it is easier for the brain to absorb.
Yes but it is also drug. morphine was originally for persevering dead body's
Yes. Habituation & tolerance will develop. Basically the body adjusts to having this morphine in the body every day. If the morphine dose is suddenly stopped, the body will react to its absence: this is known as withdrawal.
Heroin is metabolized into morphine inside the body. Heroin is the 3,6-diacetyl ester of morphine, and these ester groups are cleaved in vivo to produce morphine.
morphine
Well...Morphine, heroin, codeine and any other drug made from opium poppies shows up as the same thing: Morphine. Opiates go through a two-phase metabolism in your body. The first is where the body converts any opiate that isn't already morphine to morphine. Once that's done - it's VERY quick - your body then uses the morphine.
Morphine gives you greater amounts of endorphin and enkephalin wich are the body's natural painkillers.
Having too much of it in your body.
The similarity in molecular shape allows morphine to bind to endorphin receptors.
No. It will slow down the morphine from exiting your body.
Where bath types of adipose tissues are distributed through your body
Most likely morphine, as stories of morphine addicts are quite extensive, as well that getting off of morphine holds much more agony. Your body becomes so accustomed that it pains you so much you may need to take morphine for a legitemite reason.
Morphine shows up as opiates. In the body, all opiates besides morphine are actually prodrugs--drugs that turn into something else, and what they turn into is morphine.