No, Allegra allergy medication should not cause a positive result for methamphetamine in a drug test. Allegra contains fexofenadine, which is an antihistamine and does not typically cross-react with drug tests for methamphetamine.
No, it is a glucocorticoid steroidal antiinflammatory medication that should not test positive for methamphetamine, nor should it metabolize to any substances that yield a false positive for methamphetamine.
Uh, having methamphetamine in your system! But other sources say the following can also cause false positive results: Desoxyephedrine, Desoxyn, Methedrine, Vicks Inhaler (non-prescription drug), Selegiline, Benzphetamine and Famprofazon, Dexedrine, Benzedrine, Adderal.
sudafed can give u a false positive for meth be careful
Meth, or any of the ingredients used to make it (cold pills containing pseudoephedrine) will show up on a meth test.
No. Their metabolites look nothing like methamphetamine.
It can. Higher urine concentrations of ranitidine can trigger a false positive. In the study I'll attach in the "related links" section below it was seen in people testing the first two voids after taking the drug and only with the monoclonal EMIT d.a.u. amphetamine/methamphetamine immunoassay (ME). This did not happen with the polyclonal EMIT d.a.u. amphetamine or TDx amphetamine/methamphetamine II assays.
goat cheese
no
Methamphetamine can be detected in a drug test even if one does not smoke/abuse meth. One way this is possible is that methamphetamine was ingested in another way, such as orally in the form of prescription pills (Desoxyn is a prescription form of methamphetamine hydrochloride). Certain decongestant inhalers also contain an isomer of methamphetamine. Though this compound lacks the abuse potential of its enantiomer (non-superimposable mirror-image molecule), it may still show up as 'meth' on a drug test. Finally, other medications can also cause false positives for methamphetamine on certain tests. If one test gives a positive result, more advanced tests can be used to distinguish between positive results and false positives. If one has used the aforementioned products which contain methamphetamine, this should be brought to the attention of the test administrator.
Yes, liver disease can potentially lead to false positive urine tests for methamphetamine. This occurs because liver dysfunction may alter the metabolism and excretion of various substances, including medications and metabolites that can be mistaken for methamphetamine. Additionally, certain liver conditions can cause the accumulation of compounds that may interfere with the test's specificity. Therefore, clinical correlation and further testing may be necessary to confirm any positive results.
I'm guessing no