HAIR & NAIL TEST PANELS AVAILABLE
5 Panel
Amphetamines • Marijuana • Cocaine • Opiates(w/extended Rx opiates) • PCP
7 Panel
Amphetamines • Marijuana • Cocaine • Opiates(w/extended Rx opiates) • PCP • Benzodiazepines • Barbiturates
9 Panel
Amphetamines • Marijuana • Cocaine • Opiates(w/extended Rx opiates) • PCP • Benzodiazepines • Barbiturates • Methadone • Propoxyphene
12 Panel
Amphetamines • Marijuana • Cocaine • Opiates(w/extended Rx opiates) • PCP • Benzodiazepines • Barbiturates • Methadone • Propoxyphene • Meperidine • Tramadol • Oxycodone
14 Panel
Amphetamines • Marijuana • Cocaine • Opiates(w/extended Rx opiates) • PCP • Benzodiazepines • Barbiturates • Methadone • Propoxyphene • Meperidine • Tramadol • Oxycodone • Fentanyl • Sufentenil
15 Panel
Amphetamines • Marijuana • Cocaine • Opiates(w/extended Rx opiates) • PCP • Benzodiazepines • Barbiturates • Methadone • Propoxyphene • Meperidine • Tramadol • Oxycodone • Fentanyl • Sufentenil • Ketamine
16 Panel
Amphetamines • Marijuana • Cocaine • Opiates(w/extended Rx opiates) • PCP • Benzodiazepines • Barbiturates • Methadone • Propoxyphene • Meperidine • Tramadol • Oxycodone • Fentanyl • Sufentenil • Sufentenil • Ketamine • Suboxone(Nalaxone, Buprenorphine)
17 Panel
Amphetamines • Marijuana • Cocaine • Opiates(w/extended Rx opiates) • PCP • Benzodiazepines • Barbiturates • Methadone • Propoxyphene • Meperidine • Tramadol • Oxycodone • Fentanyl • Sufentenil • Sufentenil • Ketamine • Suboxone(Nalaxone, Buprenorphine) • Ambien(Zolpidem)
Parent Drug Metabolizes to
Amphetamine Amphetamine
Methamphetamine Amphetamine
Cocaine Benzoylecgonine, Norc ocaine
Marijuana
Carboxy – THC
Hydrocodone
Hydromorphone
Oxycodone
Oxymorphone
Heroin
6-Acetylmorphine, Morphine
Amphetamines • Marijuana • Cocaine • Opiates(w/extended Rx opiates) • PCP
7 Panel
Amphetamines • Marijuana • Cocaine • Opiates(w/extended Rx opiates) • PCP • Benzodiazepines • Barbiturates
9 Panel
Amphetamines • Marijuana • Cocaine • Opiates(w/extended Rx opiates) • PCP • Benzodiazepines • Barbiturates • Methadone • Propoxyphene
12 Panel
Amphetamines • Marijuana • Cocaine • Opiates(w/extended Rx opiates) • PCP • Benzodiazepines • Barbiturates • Methadone • Propoxyphene • Meperidine • Tramadol • Oxycodone
14 Panel
Amphetamines • Marijuana • Cocaine • Opiates(w/extended Rx opiates) • PCP • Benzodiazepines • Barbiturates • Methadone • Propoxyphene • Meperidine • Tramadol • Oxycodone • Fentanyl • Sufentenil
15 Panel
Amphetamines • Marijuana • Cocaine • Opiates(w/extended Rx opiates) • PCP • Benzodiazepines • Barbiturates • Methadone • Propoxyphene • Meperidine • Tramadol • Oxycodone • Fentanyl • Sufentenil • Ketamine
16 Panel
Amphetamines • Marijuana • Cocaine • Opiates(w/extended Rx opiates) • PCP • Benzodiazepines • Barbiturates • Methadone • Propoxyphene • Meperidine • Tramadol • Oxycodone • Fentanyl • Sufentenil • Sufentenil • Ketamine • Suboxone(Nalaxone, Buprenorphine)
17 Panel
Amphetamines • Marijuana • Cocaine • Opiates(w/extended Rx opiates) • PCP • Benzodiazepines • Barbiturates • Methadone • Propoxyphene • Meperidine • Tramadol • Oxycodone • Fentanyl • Sufentenil • Sufentenil • Ketamine • Suboxone(Nalaxone, Buprenorphine) • Ambien(Zolpidem)
Parent Drug Metabolizes to
Amphetamine Amphetamine
Methamphetamine Amphetamine
Cocaine Benzoylecgonine, Norc ocaine
Marijuana
Carboxy – THC
Hydrocodone
Hydromorphone
Oxycodone
Oxymorphone
Heroin
6-Acetylmorphine, Morphine
Drugs and drug metabolites on hair and nail drug tests
Parent Drug
Amphetamine
Methamphetamine |
Metabolizes To
Amphetamine
Amphetamine THC |
URINE test panels & DRUG DETECTION TIMES
Amphetamines
1-3 hours
2-4 days
Methamphetamines
1-4 hours
2-4 days
Cocaine Metabolite
6-18 hours
2-3 days
Cannabinoids (THC-Marijuana)
1 hour
Chronic user: 30-40 days
MDMA (Ecstasy)
2 hours
2-3 days
Opiates (Heroin, Morphine, Codeine)
1 hour
1-2 days
Oxycodone
5-7 hours
Chronic user: 21-28 days
Phencyclidine (PCP)
4-6 hours
Several days
Propoxyphene
1 hour
1-2 days
Rohypnol
1 hour
8 or more hours
GHB
1 hour
8 or more hours
1-3 hours
2-4 days
Methamphetamines
1-4 hours
2-4 days
Cocaine Metabolite
6-18 hours
2-3 days
Cannabinoids (THC-Marijuana)
1 hour
Chronic user: 30-40 days
MDMA (Ecstasy)
2 hours
2-3 days
Opiates (Heroin, Morphine, Codeine)
1 hour
1-2 days
Oxycodone
5-7 hours
Chronic user: 21-28 days
Phencyclidine (PCP)
4-6 hours
Several days
Propoxyphene
1 hour
1-2 days
Rohypnol
1 hour
8 or more hours
GHB
1 hour
8 or more hours
TEST METHOD
Substance
Detection Time
Head Hair All Drugs
3 Months (1.5 inches)
Body Hair All Drugs
7-12 Months
Finger Nails All Drugs
3-5 Months
Toe Nails All Drugs
7-12 Months
Substance
Detection Time
Head Hair All Drugs
3 Months (1.5 inches)
Body Hair All Drugs
7-12 Months
Finger Nails All Drugs
3-5 Months
Toe Nails All Drugs
7-12 Months
alcohol testing
EtG Alcohol Test - Urine
Alcohol is rapidly eliminated from the body at a rate of approximately one drink per hour. Whether looking for alcohol in breath, blood, saliva or urine, using the standard technology, the rapid elimination limits the detection of alcohol to a matter of hours.
For example an individual who was “under the influence” of alcohol using standard technologies (breath, blood or saliva > 0.08%) at 10 PM would likely test negative the next morning at 9 AM due to the rapid elimination of alcohol from the body.
After years of research, Ethyl Glucuronide (EtG) was found to be a direct metabolite of the alcohol (ethanol). EtG has emerged as the marker of choice for alcohol and due to the advances in technologies is now routinely available. Its presence in urine may be used to detect recent alcohol consumption, even after ethanol is no longer measurable using the older methods. The presence of EtG in urine is a definitive indicator that alcohol was ingested. Other types of alcohol, such a stearyl, acetyl and dodecanol, metabolizes differently and will not cause a positive result on an EtG test.
The EtG test has become known as the “80 hour test” for detecting any amount of consumed ethyl alcohol. This is not totally true. It is true that EtG can be detected in chronic drinkers for 80 hours or even up to 5 days. During this period of chronic use, the EtG level can exceed 100,000 ng/mL. Two primary factors to determine the window of detection is based on volume of alcohol consumed and the time between each drink. A person that consumes 3 drinks can only have a detectable level of EtG for approximately 20 to 24 hours and peaks at approximately 9 hours with an EtG level around 15,000 ng/mL.
Therefore, the presence of EtG in urine indicates that ethanol was ingested. EtG is a more accurate indicator of recent consumption of alcohol than measuring for the presence of ethanol itself.
EtG is stable in urine for more than 4 days at room temperature. Recent experiments indicate that heating urine to 100 degrees C actually increased the stability of EtG. Therefore, heat does not cause the breakdown of EtG, it actually increases stability. In addition, no artificial formation of EtG was found to occur following the prolonged storage of urine at room temperature fortified with 1% ethanol.
EtG is a direct metabolite of alcohol (ethanol), and its detection in urine is highly specific, similar to testing for other drugs. The typical lab utilizes the most sophisticated, sensitive, and specific equipment and technology available, LC/MS/MS, to screen, confirm, and quantitative EtG. This methodology provides highly accurate results.
Studies indicate that alcoholics in abstinence have no detectable levels of EtG in their urine after approximately 80 hours of detoxification.
EtG is only detected in urine when alcohol is consumed. This is important since it is possible to have alcohol in urine without drinking. Alcohol in urine without drinking is due to the production of ethanol in vitro. Ethanol in vitro is spontaneously produced in the bladder or the specimen container itself, due to fermentation of urine samples containing sugars (diabetes) and yeast or bacteria. Since the ethanol produced is not metabolized by the liver, EtG will not be produced and will therefore not be detected in a urine containing alcohol as a result of fermentation.
Tests show that “incidental exposure” to the chronic use of food products (vanilla extract), hygiene products, mouthwash, or OTC medications (cough syrups) can produce EtG concentrations in excess of 100 ng/mL. However, if measurable ethanol is detected (greater than .04 gm%) in the urine, and EtG is also detected in excess of 250 ng/mL, then this is very strong evidence that beverage alcohol was consumed.
Labs will allow you to select 100, 250 or 500 ng/mL as the cutoff level. It is strongly recommended that only the 500 ng/mL level be used. This avoids and eliminates any claim by the donor that the positive EtG test is a result of incidental or unintentional exposure. All testing performed on products or foods classified as incidental or unintentional exposure has never produced a positive EtG level greater than 500 ng/mL.
Benefits of an EtG urine test include:
Detects recent usage more accurately and for a longer period of time than standard testing
No false positives
No EtG found in non-drinkers
Ideal for zero tolerance and abstinence situations
Strong indicator of alcohol ingestion within the previous 3 to 5 days
EtG is only evident when alcohol is consumed and is not produced as a result of fermentation
Allows monitoring in alcohol treatment programs
Acts as an early warning system to detect trends towards relapse
EtG Alcohol Test – Hair & Nails
EtG alcohol testing is being performed in hair and nails. The window of detection is approximately 3 months for head or body hair and finger or toe nails. But be aware that biase does exist when comparing male and female hair. Recently an Italian study reported that bleaching the hair completely destroys EtG. Another study with water from a commercial pool was performed to determine the effects of chlorine. Hair exposed to the pool water found that two, 20 minute exposures reduced EtG by approximately 20%. It was found that this did not have any effect to alter or reduce the drug levels in nails. Based on these facts alone, it is recommended that only nails be used to test for EtG and not hair.
TEST METHOD
Substance
Detection Time
Hair
Ethyl Alcohol
Approximately 3 Months
Nails
Ethyl Alcohol
Approximately 3 Months