Yes, Klonopin® (generic: clonazepam) can be detected in blood tests, if the test includes a benzodiazapine panel.
If the blood test is being used to determine medical problems and treatment, it may or may not include this assay. If the blood test is being used for employment or other types of drug screening, it will almost certainly show up.
Sometimes labs report the presence of benzodiazepines (the class to which clonazepam belongs) as Valium® (generic: diazepam), another drug of the same class.
If a doctor has prescribed Klonopin® for treatment, take your prescription or your prescription bottle with you to the test, and the presence of the drug on your blood test should not be a problem.
It depends on the specificity of the test. Some tests just test for Benzodiazepines which is the class of drugs for xanax and klonopin. In this case you would show positive for benzos. If it is a specific test it will show up as xanax or alprazolam (generic name) not as klonopin or clonazepam.
My experience is that Klonopin will show up as Klonopin and Xanax as Xanax. Urine testing has become very specific (through urine testing too) and will be is able to tell the difference between the two Benzos.
Xanax (alprazolam) and Klonopin (clonazepam) are both benzodiazepines, but they are different medications with distinct chemical structures. In a lab test, they can be distinguished from one another, as each has a specific metabolic profile. Standard drug tests typically screen for benzodiazepines as a class, but more detailed tests can differentiate between specific substances like Xanax and Klonopin. Therefore, while they may show up as benzodiazepines, they can be identified separately in a comprehensive analysis.
no- as a benzodiazapine
Yes, itll test positive for benzos.
yes cuz they both benzos valium xanax klonopin would also
No Xanax is in a different class of drugs known as benzodiazempams. It will not show up as an opiate.
only on Tuesdays! YES, FOR 4 MONTHS!
Klonopin (clonazepam) and Xanax (alprazolam) are both benzodiazepines, but they may not show up the same on a blood test. While both can be detected as benzodiazepines, specific tests can differentiate between them based on their unique metabolic pathways. The detection window and the specific metabolites identified can vary depending on the test used. Overall, while they are similar in class, their specific identification in blood tests can differ.
No, and the drug your referring to is Zoloft
Yes. Klonopin is a benzodiazepine. Valium and zanax are also besodiazepines and they will all show up in a drug test. It takes approxiamtely 21 days to leave your system. If any medications show up on the test, you must be able provide proof of having a prescription for that drug.
yes. xanax and klonopin both come up as benzos in a drug test. that's how i get sent to rehab for a month for comin up dirty with klonipin, and im only 15!