RazorBladeSlide
Greenlighter
- Joined
- Sep 9, 2007
- Messages
- 36
Hello everyone,
Somebody has fentanyl patches. Here is the exact brand he has: http://www.drug-attorneys.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/03/20110303-actavis-fentanyl-pain-patch.jpg
Yes he knows the risk of IV fentanyl use is death and anyone attempting this is "stupid". Individual is looking for harm reduction so asked me to ask more experienced people for advice and information. If an individual was looking to inject this brand would it be possible? I would assume said individual would simply take a syringe, stick it straight into the reservoir, which is very small btw, and take out a small amount of fentanyl and then inject into vein. Or is their a much better way? Does one have to " cook " fentanyl like one would heroin in a spoon?
According to the box each patch contains 2.5 mg fentanyl and 0.1 mL acohol USP. And the inactive ingredients are hydroxyethyl cellulose, ethylene vinyl-acetate, copolymer, silicone adhesive between polyester backings.
I'm not a chemist but aren't inactive ingredients in opiate pain killers , like fentanyl , relatively safe? To me it appears this brand of reservoir fentanyl would be safer , and much easier to use, comparatively speaking, to a matrix style fentanyl patch, is this correct?
In any case friend is looking for best possible way to use this drug intravenously, harm reduction and any chemistry needed to filter unwanted chemicals and other useless junk not needed, assuming a chemistry student or graduate would be willing to help if for no other reason then to help keep this person alive if he chooses to do something like this.
Thank you very much for any help. Thank you bluelight for keeping people safe if they do choose to use hard drugs. What you are doing here is saving lives and its sad that drugs are not legal, like they are in Portugal, otherwise people wouldn't have to search very hard on the internet looking for harm reduction websites instead their country would have programs set up specifically for this purpose. This site is extremely ethical and saves lives. Cheers!
Somebody has fentanyl patches. Here is the exact brand he has: http://www.drug-attorneys.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/03/20110303-actavis-fentanyl-pain-patch.jpg
Yes he knows the risk of IV fentanyl use is death and anyone attempting this is "stupid". Individual is looking for harm reduction so asked me to ask more experienced people for advice and information. If an individual was looking to inject this brand would it be possible? I would assume said individual would simply take a syringe, stick it straight into the reservoir, which is very small btw, and take out a small amount of fentanyl and then inject into vein. Or is their a much better way? Does one have to " cook " fentanyl like one would heroin in a spoon?
According to the box each patch contains 2.5 mg fentanyl and 0.1 mL acohol USP. And the inactive ingredients are hydroxyethyl cellulose, ethylene vinyl-acetate, copolymer, silicone adhesive between polyester backings.
I'm not a chemist but aren't inactive ingredients in opiate pain killers , like fentanyl , relatively safe? To me it appears this brand of reservoir fentanyl would be safer , and much easier to use, comparatively speaking, to a matrix style fentanyl patch, is this correct?
In any case friend is looking for best possible way to use this drug intravenously, harm reduction and any chemistry needed to filter unwanted chemicals and other useless junk not needed, assuming a chemistry student or graduate would be willing to help if for no other reason then to help keep this person alive if he chooses to do something like this.
Thank you very much for any help. Thank you bluelight for keeping people safe if they do choose to use hard drugs. What you are doing here is saving lives and its sad that drugs are not legal, like they are in Portugal, otherwise people wouldn't have to search very hard on the internet looking for harm reduction websites instead their country would have programs set up specifically for this purpose. This site is extremely ethical and saves lives. Cheers!
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