Dextromethorphan is the primary active ingrediant in most cough medicines it is a Psychoactive alkaloid from the tryptamine or dissassociative category other alkaloids in this category are LSD, or Dmt, the effects cannot be compared to one another DXM is known to be strongly hallucinogenic relative to the dossage u take DXM cannot be smoked in either of the 2 forms because the combustion lets off toxic biproducts, but this is not true for all tryptamines for example DMT is almost always smoked because in order to induce effects through ingestion u need to activate it with a maoi which can be dangerous Also drinking lots of cough syrup can be toxic because of acetimenophen and antihistamines usually this is what will upset your stomach, but it is also possible to overdose dxm because at toxic levels it shuts down your central nervous system but as far as i know this is kinda difficult to do i thought i should add that the two other halucinogenic categories are Phenalethamines and deliriants i hope i was helpful 8)
It has dextromethophan (DM) which is in the same class of drugs as codeine, so yes it has ingredient that's very similar to codeine, that's why you need to obtain sildec pe dm by prescription
AnswerI take effexor xr. It is along the lines of an ssri. It cross reacts with the pcp test and can yield a false positive result.AnswerSame with Cymbalta, an SSNRI which also affects dopamine uptake in addition to serotonin and norepinephrine. Also, just in case - ketamine will definitely show up as PCP, as the two drugs are chemically related.AnswerTaking over the counter cough medicines, anything contained Dextromethophan(DXM). Or if you have been given Ketamine, recreational or from the hospital.Many ecstasy pills out there are not pure MDMA and are "piperzines" which contain PCP. You can get testing kids that check to see if the pills you have contain PCP and other harmfull drugs. If you buy cocaine sometimes its not exactly pure and it can be cut with PCP.AnswerDextromethorphan (cough syrup), diphenhydramine (Benadryl) and ibuprofen (Advil) all cross-react with PCP tests. If I had to take a stab, I'd say you took some Advils.