Standard urine drug tests used in medical and employment settings do not usually test for Suboxone's active ingredients (buprenorphine and naloxone) or any of their metabolites. This means Suboxone will not show up on standard drug tests. Suboxone will not show up as any opioid. However, special tests such as gas chromatography can be conducted on urine samples to look for buprenorphine, the active ingredient of Suboxone. If the lab specifically looks for Suboxone or buprenorphine, it will come up positive as buprenorphine.
Suboxone can and will show up in a drug test.
No, it will not show up as an opioid; Suboxone has to be specifically tested for in an assay.
No, each requires its own specific test. Methadone will only show up as methadone and suboxone will only show up as suboxone.
Yes
opiate
Yes, Suboxone is an opiate
Suboxone contains an opiate drug, and will show positive for opiates.
No, each require their own test. Therefore, methadone will only show up as methadone and suboxone will only show up as suboxone.
yes
Yes it will.
No
Yes, as an opiate.