Witemike
Greenlighter
Ok let me first ask my question then go from there. Purdue has a patent on oxycontin and from my knowledge OC 40 and 80s were the first two pills to be introduced back in the late 90's.(96 or 98 I believe. Maybe even OC 20's but not 100% on that.) Anyway no generics are allowed to be made for like 5 years after that if I'm not mistaken. Now here's the question, being that the newer dosages (15/30/60's) were not introduced until more recently does this mean their formula can stay unchanged until that patent expires? Or was there some type of FDA/DEA mandate that requires all of the OC's to be updated?
Also does anyone know what the OP on the new pills stands for?
Please also discuss the methods for breaking the new formulation here if you don't mind. I've searched and there doesn't seem to be a comprehensive thread devoted just to this. I think someone on here has to come across a good way for extraction.
I read somewhere that you could use alcohol to extract oxymorphone from the timeRX, I know this isn't the same gel mechanism but has anyone tried this method yet or know a definitive reason why that wouldn't work?
Thanks for the input.
Also does anyone know what the OP on the new pills stands for?
Please also discuss the methods for breaking the new formulation here if you don't mind. I've searched and there doesn't seem to be a comprehensive thread devoted just to this. I think someone on here has to come across a good way for extraction.
I read somewhere that you could use alcohol to extract oxymorphone from the timeRX, I know this isn't the same gel mechanism but has anyone tried this method yet or know a definitive reason why that wouldn't work?
Thanks for the input.
