Different brands: many companies now make plain oxycodone with no tylenol (acetaminophen) in it. One of the companies is Roxanne, and their product is known as roxycodone, and comes in 5 mg and other strengths.
Answered 9/15/2018
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"cet(te)" = tylenol (acetaminophen): Any medicine ending in "cet" usually means it has acetaminophen. There are many brands of plain Oxycodone without the acetaminophen. The most common is Roxicet made by the Roxanne pharmaceutical company. It is available in 2.5, 5, 7.5 and 10 mg, and there are other brands with up to 30 mg of oxycodone in immediate release. Long-acting brands like OxyContin etc. may have up to 80 mg per pill.
Answered 7/27/2014
3.8k views
There aren't any: Let me explain - "Cet or cette" at the end of medications means it contains acetaminophen or tylenol. The active opiate in the medication is Oxycodone, and oxycodone comes without tylenol in both brand-name and generic versions, including Roxicet, which comes in 5, 10, 15 and 30 mg strengths. It also comes in sustained release long-acting versions in doses ranging from 10mg - 80 mg.
Answered 9/3/2014
3.7k views
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