A 15 mg morphine is small round light blue tablet with a 15 on one side and an m on the other side.
As morphine is not a patented molecule, and can be produced by any pharmaceutical company that wants to produce morphine, the pills vary ALOT from brand to brand, so say 15 on them, some don't, some have a brand name, logo, or brand identification, some don't, some are scored, some are oval, some are purple or brown... There is no clear answer to this question, however, you can bring it into a pharmacy, they have big books of pills sorted by appearance, and it lists most common brands. Again, this may not be 100% accurate, as some generic pill makers will make many pills that look identical, or very very similar in appearance to their other pills, or to other manufacturers' pills. The only sure way would be to test them chemicaly, either by bringing them in to a hospital, the police, or maybe even with a home drug test kit, and pill scrapings dissolved in water, instead of testing urine with the kit. drug test kits are available at pharmasies and other loccations. Your best bet would be the hospital or the police for 100% certain identification.
Morphine Sulfate 100 are round like a flattened pea: color=grey (Mallinkrodt)
Morphine Sulfate 60 are round like a flattened pea: color=orange (Mallinkrodt)
This will however greatly vary from brand to brand, and one dosage from one company may be the same as a different dosage from a different company.
Brand name 15mg OxyContin looks strikingly similar in size, shape and color to 80mg OxyContin. The only difference I noticed is the imprint "15" rather than "80". Although I am just slightly colorblind, I am confident that it is pretty much the same shade of green.
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The 80 mg pills are slightly larger than the pills of other strengths (which are all the same size) and, like was said, the 80 mg pills are green but the 15 mg pills are actually black. Perdue (the manufacturer of OxyContin) has a chart on their website showing the various strengths and what they look like.
http://www.purduepharma.com/imagesour_productsproductoxycontin.gif
Dunno about the 40mg but the 100mg is light blue. The 30mg is a deep burgundy. These are the "extended release" type, designed to dissolve very slowly(over 8-10 hours) as it passes through your body.
A 15 mg morphine is small round light blue tablet with a 15 on one side and an m on the other side.
It looks like a small, white, perfectly round pill with a line down the middle on one side and imprint on the other.
a round pill with 30 on it.
The 40 MG Oxycontin is Yellow..
Oxycontin is just a time release version of oxycodone. I take oxycodone 15mg, which is fast acting, you can get Oxycontin in 60 or 80mg but it is made to work over a longer time period, some people get into trouble with Oxycontin because they break time release by chewing it, this is very dangerous to put that much oxycodone in your system at once. The only way a test would detect the "difference" is by the amount in your system but not the drug. If you chew up an Oxycontin 60 it will show up the same as if you took 4 oxycodone 15mg. It's the same drug, just different concentrations.
There is nothing like Oxycontin in homeopathy
Oc 80s are like a dark greenish gray with oc imprinted on one side and 80 imprinted on the other
Yes they can . 1. Talk to your doctor/psychiatrist 2. Look it up in your comp.
sprinkle some fairy dust in the cup and get ready to fail your drug test.
.15mg equals 150mcg
forget it
The pain medication Oxycontin is a timed-release form of oxycodone, an opioid drug. Like most narcotics, Oxycontin can cause dependency or addiction.
Yes It will. It is the same family as benzos, like xanax etc
The 15mg (roxy) oxycodone hci is a round minty green pill with the imprint a on one side and 214 on the other..this pill is used to treat pain..