Does anyone know if it will show up on a drug test? Assume cost is no issue and they test for everything that they can. Just 1.4mg
DOB
Does anyone know if it will show up on a drug test? Assume cost is no issue and they test for everything that they can. Just 1.4mg
[21 Points] drpnit:
[5 Points] ice_cream4breakfast:
Amphetamines
[3 Points] mymuse100:
might pop up for Amphetamines
... BUT when tested (not just dipstick but confirmed) they will run, Meth amph, MDMA, MDA...
Dox is rare... and 1.4mg is a LOW DOSE... so low that noone takes amph in the 1-5mg range... so you shouldnt really worry to much
[2 Points] AutoModerator:
Please give your post a meaningful title. That means for example 'Vendor Inquiry - Does anybody has experience with the vendor X' instead of 'I have a question'. Thanks.
I am a bot, and this action was performed automatically. Please contact the moderators of this subreddit if you have any questions or concerns.
[1 Points] OrbitzSaturn:
Yes but will be gone in like 3 days
[1 Points] PHattygrilledcheese:
Yeah its a subtituted amphetamine
[1 Points] FraterP:
Use yar dipstick jimmy!!!
Hey guys, if you're not well-versed in the scientific research, please don't give your opinion. Yes, DOB is a substituted amphetamine. However, DOB's cross-reactivity on the most common amphetamine and methamphetamine immunoassays (urine drug tests) is 0.5%, and less than 0.4%, respectively.
In other words, the amount of DOB needed in one's system to actually test positive for AMP or MAMP is such a gargantuan amount (FAR north of 50,000 ng/ml), that no human is going to test that high.
If OP waltzed into a lab and pissed into a GC/MS on full scan mode, the lab would find the DOB. But that's not the way it works. He is going to have his urine subject to an immunoassay, which will test negative. There would be no reason to confirm a negative result with GC/MS, so this nigga is cool.
So while it is technically possible to test positive, it's just not. gonna. happen.
I understand you guys want to help, and you have the underlying concepts right. But in the real world, science is an exact ... science.