For about 5 years in jail
8 mg tablets
Hydrocodone and Dilaudid (hydromorphone) are both opioid medications, but they have different potencies. Generally, hydromorphone is significantly more potent than hydrocodone; approximately 1 mg of hydromorphone is roughly equivalent to 4-5 mg of hydrocodone. Therefore, to equal 1 mg of Dilaudid (8 mg), you would need about 32-40 mg of hydrocodone. However, it's important to consult a healthcare professional for accurate dosing and safety considerations.
Hydromorphine Hydrochloride in 2 mg is a controlled substance. It is not sold over the counter and is only available in pharmacies. This item is illegal to sell and therefore does not have a street value.
40mg of hydromorphone a good dose? um why yes it it even if you have a opiate tolerance that will knock you on your butt trust me
I'd rather not risk it. Help yourself to my share.
No
Dilaudid K4 is hydromorphone 4mg. The 4mg is equal to 40mg of Dilaudid.
No, milligrams (mg) of hydromorphone do not equal milligrams of oxycodone, as they are different medications with distinct potencies and effects. Hydromorphone is typically more potent than oxycodone, meaning that a smaller dose of hydromorphone is required to achieve similar analgesic effects. Therefore, the conversion between the two medications is not a straightforward 1:1 ratio and should be done carefully under medical supervision.
3 dollars a mg
$2-3 per mg.
How Many 4 Mg. Hydromorphone are legal to write in in Florida
Generally speaking, hydromorphone, brand name dilaudid amongst others, is in fact stronger mg to mg than oxycodone (on theory), especially as hydromorphone is said to be 6-8 times the strength of morphine. But with that high a dose of oxycodone, I'd say the oxy would be stronger given its at such a high mg. However, if the hydromorphone was at a higher level say 10-20 mg, or even 4-6 mg IV push, the hydromorphone would definitely trump that oxy. But remember, each person is different and some people react better to certain drugs as opposed to others, regardless of FDA conversion strength equivalency ratios.