Lucas23
Bluelighter
Opana sells for significantly less than oxycodone on the street in NYC.
Are you kidding me??? Oxymorphone acts more like morphine where oxycodone acts more like codeine. Just because pharmaceutical med production starts at thebaine it does not mean that morphine and codeine are very different from their hydro/oxy counterparts.... If I am not mistaken you can convert morphine into hydro morphine and even further to oxymorphoe as well as codeine.@bayhead The reason the doc prescribed an ER med is NSAIDs and acetaminophen aren't indicated for chronic conditions, they are only meant for short term pain. While you can take tylenol and ibuprofen together, sometimes they are alternated every two hours. (tylenol, two hours later ibuprofen, two hours later tylenol...and so on.) The only thing you cannot mix is two different NSAIDs like naproxen and ibuprofen.
It is not unusual for the OP to be switched to a new compound. Sometimes they will switch to another opiate is to avoid tolerance building heavily to one, meaning they can give less and have a lower side effect profile, like you said. I'm not sure where you're getting it from, but oxycodone has nothing to do with codeine, nor oxymorphone anything to do with morphine. Oxymorphone and oxycodone are actually both manfactured from thebaine (an opiate). Just because the naming sounds similar and they both have a methyl group on the gamma carbon doesn't make them related. They are all very unique compounds with very different effects and differing degrees of strength. Though the bioavailability of oxymorphone does raise with food, I'm not so sure it's 300% of what it was. Going from 10% to 30% is actually a threefold change. Also, I don't think you have to worry about OD with the OP, not everyone abuses their meds. Plus their doctor isn't going to prescribe an amount that would make them sick, that's why they went to medical school. I'm not trying to be rude, just informative.
Opana sells for significantly less than oxycodone on the street in NYC.
Opana sells for significantly less than oxycodone on the street in NYC.