Dankycodone
Bluelighter
- Joined
- Jul 30, 2009
- Messages
- 1,050
Are this just as safe to IV as the pill's ? I wont be doing suboxone for a while I am just wondering for harm reduction's sake.
Suboxone (sublingual tablets)
Inactive Ingredients: lactose, mannitol, cornstarch, povidone K30, citric acid, sodium citrate, FD&C Yellow No.6 color, magnesium stearate, and the tablets also contain Acesulfame K sweetener and a lemon / lime flavor.
Suboxone (sublingual film)
Inactive Ingredients: polyethylene oxide, hydroxypropyl methylcellulose, maltitol, acesulfame potassium, lime flavor, citric acid, sodium citrate, FD&C yellow #6, and white ink.
Subutex
Each tablet also contains lactose, mannitol, cornstarch, povidone K30, citric acid, sodium citrate and magnesium stearate.
^ Nice that is pretty interesting. White ink does not sound too healthy, JB I would not shoot that until you throughly research it.
Opacode White S-1-7085 (pharmaceutical glaze modified, titanium dioxide, isopropyl alcohol, ammonium hydroxide, propylene glycol, n-butyl alcohol and dimethylpolysiloxane).
Negligible quantities of the following ingredients are present in the white ink used to write the name SIGMA: Pharmaceutical glaze USP/NF, titanium dioxide, isopropyl alcohol, ammonium hydroxide, propylene glycol, butan-1-ol and dimethicone
the tablets have lemon/lime flavor. the strips have just lime.
james, you are saying they taste exactly the same though?
also, how quickly do hey dissolve in water when prepped for IV? did you have to use heat to expedite?
Because of the potentially greater relative bioavailability of SUBOXONE sublingual film compared to SUBOXONE (buprenorphine and naloxone) sublingual tablets, patients switching from SUBOXONE (buprenorphine and naloxone) sub- lingual tablets to SUBOXONE sublingual film should be monitored for over-medication. Those switching from SUBOXONE sublingual film to SUBOXONE (buprenorphine and naloxone) sublingual tablets should be monitored for withdrawal or other indications of under-dosing. In clinical studies, pharmacokinetics of SUBOXONE sublingual film was similar to the respective dosage strengths of SUBOXONE (buprenorphine and naloxone) sublingual tablets, although not all doses and dose combinations met bioequivalence criteria.
I don't know how many different pharmaceutical white inks there are, but here is one formulation that I found (in this case used on Clindamycin capsules):
Source: http://www.drugstorepharmacy.ca/medical/medications_details.aspx?brand_name_id=4723
And this one, from Sigma Cilicaine VK Penicillin Capsules:
Source: http://www.emedical.com.au/default.asp?pageID=56&itemID=10612
I'd imagine most white pharamceutical inks are similar in contents...they probably all have titanium dioxide as a major component. It is my guess that since the solvents are evaporated as the ink dries, you are left with the glaze, TiO2, and dimethicone. They are present in such small amounts that I would be surprised if any harm were to come from injection, especially after micro-filtering. I'd like to know a little more about the glaze though!
^ Nice that is pretty interesting. White ink does not sound too healthy, JB I would not shoot that until you throughly research it.
I'm really interested in these, I'll post the e-mail and links I got today for everyone in a second.
Questions: When sniffing something does it have to be in the nostrils, or are the membranes further back. Because it would be easy to put the strip in your nose, and it would dissolve, but if it had to be far back it might cause a problem.
This seems great for IV, I haven't looked at all the ingredients, but so far this is looking promising, I might ask to switch if I can still sniff.