just got a 2.8mg time release patch gonna squeeze out the contents for sublingual doses as described on erowid...
reports in a hour:)
lol
already mad loaded onhydrocodone
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just got a 2.8mg time release patch gonna squeeze out the contents for sublingual doses as described on erowid...
reports in a hour:)
lol
already mad loaded onhydrocodone
whered you get a fentanyl patch???
my grandma is in hospice its like a nurse at home thingQuote:
Originally Posted by speeds207
constant flow of painkillers in this house
dont worry. i only took 1 lol
and she has like a thousand so no worries
lucky
carefull...just a dab will do...and if this your first time with it you'll probably vomit...so take it slow...
really careful, a girlfriend of mine almost killed herself on one of those. good stuff, though.
ok... mad hungover.. let me type this up...
i started by squeezing out the packet, spereating into four doses...
at about 8 o clock i took dose #1 and waited till 9pm.. no noticable effects... so i take dose #2 and dose #3 in impatience... by 11 I am feelin the fentanyl and is peaking strong, i look at the last dose which had evaporated it and decided to put it on top of a bowl... got such a fuckin euphoric opiated rush, i can't even begin to tell you how intense. like fuckin h or some shit. was havin hand tremors.... got a little nausea which was soon counteracted by vomiting, lol, then i threw a towel over it and passed out on my bed
i was very very loaded
youu lucky bastard. send me a patch!.. haha you better take advantage of those painkillers.
lol i am i am
in ny btw so if youd b willin to travel i wouldnt mind selling
im so blasted right now lol
i think i like fentanyl
First synthesized in Belgium in the late 1950s, fentanyl, with an analgesic potency of about 80 times that of morphine, was introduced into medical practice in the 1960s as an intravenous anesthetic under the trade name of Sublimaze®. Thereafter; two other fentanyl analogues were introduced; alfentanil (Alfenta®), an ultra-short (5-10 minutes) acting analgesic, and sufentanil (Sufenta®), an exceptionally potent analgesic (5 to 10 times more potent than fentanyl) for use in heart surgery. Today, fentanyls are extensively used for anesthesia and analgesia. Duragesic®, for example, is a fentanyl transdermal patch used in chronic pain management, and Actiq® is a solid formulation of fentanyl citrate on a stick that dissolves slowly in the mouth for transmucosal absorption. Actiq® is intended for opiate-tolerant individuals and is effective in treating breakthrough pain in cancer patients. Carfentanil (Wildnil®) is an analogue of fentanyl with an analgesic potency 10,000 times that of morphine and is used in veterinary practice to immobilize certain large animals.
Illicit use of pharmaceutical fentanyls first appeared in the mid-1970s in the medical community and continues to be a problem in the United States. To date, over 12 different analogues of fentanyl have been produced clandestinely and identified in the U.S. drug traffic. The biological effects of the fentanyls are indistinguishable from those of heroin, with the exception that the fentanyls may be hundreds of times more potent. Fentanyls are most commonly used by intravenous administration, but like heroin, they may also be smoked or snorted.
Source: DEA
ya know if u add another d to the dea it sounds about right