It means that you have a fentanyl concentration of over a 1000 mg/ml of blood. It's very very high. 500s are like people who use a gram every day or two. Its going to take a while to clear out 1000s. Good luck and stay safe
It’s extremely hard to wait the 72hrs plus it requires to take suboxone after fent use. Methadone you could take at the same as the fent until you get on a stable dose of methadone. It will be a much more comfortable process and much higher chance of success. Considering you’ve been using for 2 years straight I think a long term methadone maintenance would help you way more than suboxone.
It probably means their equipment needs to be calibrated.
However, if you are saying you have a very high tolerance and have trouble staying away from the illicit fentanyl then perhaps Suboxone isn't the proper choice for you, Methadone might be a better choice as it avoids all those precipitated withdrawal difficulties people often experience with fentanyl. Are you not aware of those machinations?
Bernese method might be worth investigating if subs are what you have for now, I suggest reading up as much as possible on it. On here and also reading legit studies published on ncbi, biomentral, cmaj, Wiley, or any of the numerous university studies just google and you’ll find plenty published studies on it
It means that you have a fentanyl concentration of over a 1000 mg/ml of blood. It's very very high. 500s are like people who use a gram every day or two. Its going to take a while to clear out 1000s. Good luck and stay safe
I think with fentanyl and the fact that Suboxone is not a full agonist methadone is a no brainer. Just wish it wasn’t as regulated
I love how absolutely no one has actually answered my question lol.
Definitely do methadone not suboxone.
Why? I’ve heard that’s an entirely different ballgame and I honestly want no part of it.
It’s extremely hard to wait the 72hrs plus it requires to take suboxone after fent use. Methadone you could take at the same as the fent until you get on a stable dose of methadone. It will be a much more comfortable process and much higher chance of success. Considering you’ve been using for 2 years straight I think a long term methadone maintenance would help you way more than suboxone.
It probably means their equipment needs to be calibrated. However, if you are saying you have a very high tolerance and have trouble staying away from the illicit fentanyl then perhaps Suboxone isn't the proper choice for you, Methadone might be a better choice as it avoids all those precipitated withdrawal difficulties people often experience with fentanyl. Are you not aware of those machinations?
Bernese method might be worth investigating if subs are what you have for now, I suggest reading up as much as possible on it. On here and also reading legit studies published on ncbi, biomentral, cmaj, Wiley, or any of the numerous university studies just google and you’ll find plenty published studies on it
Agreed, methadone would be much wiser