pie
YES
Morphine sulfate er is a Extended release pill that slowly release the morphine into your system to help relive pain for up to 12hrs (around the clock pain) unlike instant release that last about 4 hrs and all the medication hits you at once to relive pain that's short term.
Yes. The only difference in these drugs is how they are prepared so that they release either immediately or over a sustained period of time. They are both morphine sulfate.
No, morphine sulfate isn't the same as percocet.. which contains acetaminophen and oxycodone. At equivalent dosage and on a person who never took them before, oxycodone is 2 times more powerful than morphine.
Oxycontin is a synthetic manufactured MS. I have taken both for a condition I have. I will say I stay in reality much more with the MS. The oxy changed my personality, I am told not to the best. I think the pain relief is about the same. Tolerance is always a problem. The best thing is to STOP, I truly believe now that I have my pain is no worse. Now if you are taking them for other reasons than pain, then well....
Although both morphine and fentanyl are opioid painkillers, there are significant differences between the two, both in chemical structure and effects. Fentanyl is much more powerful and shorter acting than morphine (although it is not active if swallowed), and thus the dosing schedules/mechanisms are very different.
no. norco is hydrocodone not morphine. morphine is stronger however norco 10/325 is the strongest dose of norco. Norco is for moderate pain and morphine for moderate to severe pain. ER also means extended release where norco is not extended. Please be aware that norco has acetaminophen in it which you should never exceed 4000mg\24 hours.
Consult your physician or pharmacist; they will know the details of your condition and be able to give you the appropriate advice. Do you really want to put your life in the hands of a bunch of hoo-has on the internet?
About two days
Absolutely not; they are the exact same thing; one is just designed to last longer than the other before your body breaks it down. Morphine IR and Morphine ER are both morphine; one is instant-release (IR) and the other is extended release (ER). So a UA will definitely detect both, no matter whether it is a slow-release (ER) or a fast-release (IR). Depending on the type of test it will come up positive for 'opiates', or 'morphine' if it is a test that names the actual base substance. Some answers to this question have been moved to the discussion board.
Generally morphine sulfate in 100mg may be fatal for a non tolerant user unless it is in time released form which is still a high dose for a non tolerant user. However It will stay in your blood stream for about 8 hours and then will be in your urine for detection for up to 3 days. The time that morphine is metabolized may be some what faster in a tolerant individual, Thus the detection time in the persons body is shorter than a non tolerant user.AnswerGenerally morphine sulfate in 100mg may be fatal for a non tolerant user unless it is in time released form which is still a high dose for a non tolerant user. However It will stay in your blood stream for about 8 hours and then will be in your urine for detection for up to 3 days. The time that morphine is metabolized may be some what faster in a tolerant individual, Thus the detection time in the persons body is shorter than a non tolerant user. I have been on MS Contin 100mg ER for 15 years. I am a T12 L1 incomplete paraplegic I also take 3/soma 350, xanax 1mg/twice daily, percoset 10mg/3x daily as needed, and pamelor 50mg 3x daily. I suffer from chronic nerve pain in my back and legs. I was on 30mg Oxycontin IR 4x daily but since Michael Jackson died the pain clinic doctor/doctors are becoming leary about mixing morphine sulfate 100mg er with Oxycontin ER and IR but putting percoset 10mg is really just 10mg of oxycodone and ibuprofen One other good tip is the Pamelor. It is an antidepressant but is used for the burning and pins and needles feeling I have from the spinal chord injury.
methadone acyclic analog of morphine or heroin acts on the same opioid receptors as these drugs