no
toradol is the best choice but doctors will prefer if the patient is off methadone before giving other narcotic.
According to historical classifications, Oxcarbazepine is a narcotic. However, by today's standards it is not a narcotic since it is not scheduled. It is simply a prescription medication.
If you are not prescribed this medication, you can be arrested for felony possession of a scheduled narcotic.
Codeine is a 'scheduled' drug (i.e.- you can only puy or possess it with a prescription). If you were not prsecribed this medication then you are in unlawful possession of a scheduled narcotic.
That looks like an abbreviation for Scheduled IV Controlled Substance. It's a misdemeanor of the first degree for possession of a Scheduled IV narcotic.
Opium is a Scheduled 2 Narcotic according to the Controlled Substance Act.
No. Toradol is an NSAID just like motrin or ibuprofen.
Toradol is an anti-inflammatory drug used for pain
Pharmacological Class: Lincosamide.It is not a scheduled narcotic and thus is not on the FDA schedule as thus, instituted in 1934.
Toradol is an NSAID, or non-steroidal anti inflammatory drug. It is NON-NARCOTIC, meaning it is unscheduled in the United States and not against the law to possess it or have it in your blood or urine (aside from maybe needing a prescription to obtain it in the first place). But to answer the question, like ibuprofen and naproxen with which it is closely related, it should stay in your system for a period of up to 7-10 days, but being it is non-narcotic, there is no active metabolite it converts to in your body which can be easily tested for with, say, a simple urine or blood test. (note this is NOT legal advice)
No, but it does have analgesic actions. It's a Schedule Class V that has no opioid components. Mostly used to treat neuropathy.