Does Methadone or Methadose Show Up Ona Standard 5 Panel Urine Drug Test?
Question by T CUSE 2: does methadone or methadose show up ona standard 5 panel urine drug test?
methadose which is pretty much the same as methadone. they use it in methadone clinics, does that and methadone show up on a standard 5 panel test. i hear it doesn’t i’d just like to know the answer for sure tho. thank you
Best answer:
Answer by Blibstodge
Yes it sure does. Methadone is an opiate the same thing that is the main ingredient of heroine and morphine and Oxycontin even Vicodin.
They will all be listed as opiates without differentiating them.
So if you took a little Methadone and little VIcodin and a little Heroine. It all adds up under OPIATES.
It is very hard to get past a urine test for opiates.
I don’t know about Qtpie but I am the guy in the lab doing these tests and methadone is lumped togehther with all opiates. There is no way to separate them
Answer by qtpie20121
No the previous post was wrong. methadone does not appear as an opiate on a 5 panel drugs screen or any other drug screen. Drugs on a 5 panel screen include Amphetamines (including Methamphetamine, “Crystal Meth”), Cannabinoids (THC, Marijuana), Cocaine, Opiates (Codeine, Morphine, Heroin, Oxycodone, Vicodin, etc.), & Phencyclidine (PCP).
Methadone does not cross react with the standard opiate drug screen. It must be specifically screened for.Most “drug tests” are really “drug screens”. That is, they only show that there is a probability that a substance similar to a particular drug is present in a sample. However, even though methadone and heroin are both “opioids” and have similar effects, their chemical structures are very different. For this reason, methadone does not react with the drug screens used to look for heroin. Therefore treatment programs use separate screens for methadone and heroin-type opioids (such as morphine and codeine).Opium is a black, gooey extract of the opium poppy (papaver somniferum). The main active ingredients in opium are the drugs morphine and codeine. These and other drugs found in or manufactured from opium are called “opiates”. Heroin is made from morphine so it is also an opiate.
There are also drugs with effects like those of morphine but which are manufactured entirely in a laboratory. Methadone is an example of such a man-made drug. The term “opioid” is used to describe all these synthetic drugs as well as the ‘natural’ opiates. In other words, morphine, codeine, heroin, and methadone are all “opioids”, but only morphine, codeine, and heroin are “opiates.”
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