View Full Version : New roxicodone 80mg?
some of my friends keep swearing to me they can get these new 80mg roxis, that you cant snort or bang. You just pop them and get really fucked up. I've been looking everywhere online to see if I find them, but no luck yet. These fools probably came up on some generic OC 80s and they think theyre new and callin them 80mg roxis. Idk, thats just my theory.
anyone heard anything about this, or know if its bullshit?
Natas666
10-12-2008, 12:20 AM
Sounds like bs!!!
Guitar
10-12-2008, 05:51 AM
Yep, if you can't find any info about it online , then its bullshit.
IllCanabillyVanilly
10-12-2008, 08:35 AM
the fact that you can't find it sny info online doesnt mean anything. i mean, when pregabalin first came out, people were getting high off it but it took forever for it to be recognized by erowid. i know pregabalin and oxycodone arent the same thing but i as just using an example.
mephist00
10-12-2008, 10:40 AM
idk i asked a few people and they all told me no, and found nothing online but mr vanilly is right that it can take a while for it to show up somewhere on the net
Guitar
10-12-2008, 08:34 PM
If 80 mg roxys were available , there would be info about it the net.
^exactly. That would be the biggest news among the OC community ever. instead of regular OC80s, imagine roxi 80s. Those shits must be magical. but Im not gettin my hopes up, I think this its b/s untill proven otherwise.
Natas666
10-12-2008, 09:30 PM
There were "new" generics released by MKRAP, there is an 80 of course, so maybe thats what they got and got there terms messed up.
Purdue Pharma L.P. Announces Resolution of OxyContin(R) Patent Lawsuit with
Mallinckrodt Inc.
Mallinckrodt acknowledges validity of Purdue patents; Purdue licenses limited
sales of some generic oxycodone strengths
STAMFORD, Conn., Sept. 2 /PRNewswire/ -- Purdue Pharma L.P. of Stamford,
Connecticut and Mallinckrodt Inc. of Hazelwood, Missouri have agreed to end
the OxyContin(R) (oxycodone HCl controlled-release) Tablets patent
infringement lawsuit between them in the United States District Court for the
Southern District of New York.
According to the agreement, Mallinckrodt acknowledges the validity and
enforceability of Purdue's patents and admits that marketing generic versions
of OxyContin under its Abbreviated New Drug Application (ANDA) without a
license from Purdue would infringe these patents. In exchange, Purdue has
agreed to grant Mallinckrodt a royalty-bearing license, ending in 2009, to
sell limited quantities of generic versions of 10 mg, 20 mg, 40 mg, and 80 mg
extended-release oxycodone tablets.
In the most recent decision in the litigation which Purdue and
Mallinckrodt have now settled, the United States District Court for the
Southern District of New York rejected claims that the Purdue patents were
unenforceable because of Purdue's alleged inequitable conduct in obtaining
them. In an Opinion and Order dated January 7, 2008, the Court stated, "There
is no evidence of deceptive intent with respect to Purdue's failure to
disclose prior controlled-release formulations or its failure to disclose [a
Purdue scientist's] affiliations, both of which were made in good faith."
"We are pleased to resolve the dispute with Mallinckrodt in a manner that
respects our inventions," said John H. Stewart, President of Purdue Pharma, in
announcing the end of the lawsuit. "We will continue to defend our inventions
against infringers."
Purdue Pharma is a privately-held pharmaceutical company known for
pioneering research on persistent pain. Headquartered in Stamford, CT, Purdue
is engaged in the research, development, production, and distribution of both
prescription and over-the-counter medicines and hospital products. Additional
information about Purdue can be found at www.purduepharma.com.
Feelings Of U4ia
10-13-2008, 01:26 AM
No, there isn't such a thing. No doctor would ever feel comfortable prescribing 80mg of instant release oxycodone. It's hard enough to get prescribed extended-release Oxycontin.
Yes, there would also be info on the net about it, so to the person who said you can't find it online doesn't mean anything, it DOES mean something. There would be something, somewhere, if they were out.
the fact that you can't find it sny info online doesnt mean anything. i mean, when pregabalin first came out, people were getting high off it but it took forever for it to be recognized by erowid. i know pregabalin and oxycodone arent the same thing but i as just using an example.
Just because Erowid didn't have anything about it, doesn't mean shit. Erowid isn't the best source for everything. If you did a simple google search on Pregabalin, you would have found tons of information about it, because it's a real medication. Roxicodone 80mg, isn't. Also, who the fuck gets high on Pregabalin, lol.
idk i asked a few people and they all told me no, and found nothing online but mr vanilly is right that it can take a while for it to show up somewhere on the net
Again, Erowid isn't "the net." If it was a real medication, there would be information about it on drug and doctor websites. Erowid doesn't even list all of the different dosages of Oxycodone, so of course it wouldn't be there.
I asked my friend who is in his 3rd year of pharmacy school and reads new drug headlines every single day, and he tells me there isn't such a pill either.
I doubt it will ever be made, either.
I~got~em~4~da~low
10-19-2008, 06:26 PM
okay so i am a pm patient and i asked the dr if there were any he said to his knowledge no..but he did say they were about to release a new 60
okay so i am a pm patient and i asked the dr if there were any he said to his knowledge no..but he did say they were about to release a new 60
That would be the shit! roxi60s!!!!!!!!!
vBulletin® v3.7.0, Copyright ©2000-2009, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.