'False-Positive' and 'False-Negative' Test Results in Clinical Urine Drug Testing For example, ibuprofen can cause false-positive test
Large doses of tramadol can cause a false positive for methadone or PCP. If you think you've had a false positive on a urine drug test
Taking phentermine can cause false-positive urine test results Large doses of tramadol can cause a false positive for methadone or PCP.
There are a few vitamins that can cause a false positive drug test. I don't take tramadol but a urine drug test came up positive. 5 days but
Quetiapine can cause a false positive for opioids (specifically methadone) on a urine drug test. methadone). Tramadol. Tramadol is an
tramadol.1 An OTC nasal inhaler can cause a false positive as well drug mexiletine who falsely tested positive for amphetamine on his urine
Quetiapine can cause a false positive for opioids (specifically methadone) on a urine drug test. methadone). Tramadol. Tramadol is an
Can meloxicam cause a false positive for marijuana on urine tests?
Your urine drug test result was positive for (insert drug/ Confirmatory – buprenorphine, norbuprenorphine. Tramadol can cause false positives.
Comments
It's not like "Let me immediately take action based on belief in the complete accuracy of a single medical report" isn't the norm in such stories. Arguably, her real fault wasn't in sleeping around, it was in going home and thinking there was going to be a marriage left after she blew it up.
(And, to be honest, I'm sure many of the readers don't actually understand how false positives work. If you get a positive result on a 99% accurate test, that doesn't mean there's only a 1% chance of it being wrong.
On rare diseases, a positive result is very likely to be a false one, simply by the weight of numbers: If a test is 99% accurate, and 100,000 people get tested for a disease that only 500 of them have, then you're going to end up with 495 true positive results (99% of the sick people got accurate results) and 995 false positive results (1% of the healthy people got inaccurate results). In case like this, that would mean that a positive result in a 99% accurate test is only actually a ~33% chance that you have the disease.
tl;dr: The doctor was an idiot, and the ending should have included a malpractice lawsuit for failing basic math.)