From personal experience, no it will not mask any opiates you've taken. yesterday i took a full blown dt, ranging from pcp to mj to opiates. even tho the only things i do are mj nd opiates, i passed everything but opiates itself. so no i do not think it works to hide any opiates. sorry
Yes
No Suboxone will not block the use of opiates on a drug test. It will still show up, but you won't get the feeling from the opiates. You will however get into trouble if you are being prescribed Suboxone.
on a low dosage the opiates will not be blocked by methadone. 30 mg will not block it
For me, longer than 24 hours
Opiates block the pain signals to the brain - therefore the the brain has reduced sensitivity to the pain.
no
Methadone will block the effects of opiates causing you not to feel them.
no because suboxin is designed to block opiates, where as Oxycontin is the opiate.
Yes, depending on how high of a methadone dose you are on. Methadone will clog your opioid receptors and make it hard for any other opiate to act in your brain. Usually, any dose higher than 40mg's will block other opiates.
Yes, Methadone will block other opioid drugs.
Drugs that produce opposite results in the body. i.e. Narcan and opiates. The opposite term is antagonism. These are drugs that work like the drug.
Unlike actual opioid antagonists (such as naltrexone and naloxone), which bind to opioid receptors, preventing binding by opiates (thus, blocking opiates and their effects), methadone only partially blocks other opiates. Methadone is an opioid agonist, meaning that it binds with and activates opioid receptors. However, during the time that it occupies the opioid receptor, it competes with other opiates, and prevents them from binding. While, at a receptor level, this produces a partial "blocking" effect, the overall availability of methadone throughout the system would have to be significant enough to produce this effect everywhere in order to truly "block" other opiates. So, the short answer is: partially