Quote Originally Posted by sic1231
thanks a lot for the info.
do you know if water is/can be considered a sample adulteration or substitution? or if the lab can distinguish between a person drinking excess water or adding water to their sample? i'm trying to get an idea of what result i could expect back after pouring some water into a lab sample to dilute it.
Drinking large amounts of water leads to the sample being ruled "diluted" due to the creatinine level dropping below 20 mg/dL. A urine sample with a creatinine level between 2 - 20 mg is ruled diluted. Creatinine levels less than 2 mg are ruled "substituted" (aka "not consistant with human urine"). Adding water to a urine sample can easily cause the creatinine to nosedive to this range so watch your step. Under DHHS and DOT regulations, a retest under direct observation is in order if the creatinine level is between 2 - 5 mg
Burnt Toast Reviewed by Burnt Toast on . MedTox Lab Test. Help? I was sent to the hospital by my employer for a drug test yesterday. I'm worried they're going to skip the initial immunoassay test, since it appears the tests ordered are GC/MS confirmation tests with reduced cutoff levels. One of the test codes is 149. The description of this test code on the test catalog portion of the MedTox website (MEDTOX : Test Catalog) reads: "Quantitative result is marijuana metabolite measured as 11-nor-delta-9-carboxy-THC (carboxy-THC) by gas chromatography with Rating: 5