Dosing Guide

Simple steps, clear math and calm confidence. This guide walks you through syringes, reconstitution, calculation, approaches and best practices.

Basics

U 100 syringes

Use U 100 insulin syringes for precise micro‑dosing. One milliliter equals 100 units, letting you draw exact amounts.

10 u = 0.10 mL • 50 u = 0.50 mL • 100 u = 1.00 mL

Reconstitution

Add bacteriostatic water slowly down the side of the glass, not directly into the powder. Let the peptide dissolve fully; swirl gently—never shake.

The amount of water you add changes the concentration per unit, not the total peptide. More water = fewer mg per unit; less water = more mg per unit. Choose what makes your math simple and consistent.

Why accuracy matters

Accurate reconstitution and careful math prevent waste, reduce side effects and keep your plan steady. Small errors add up—spend a few extra minutes setting up to avoid confusion later.

How to calculate

Use the calculator

Enter the vial’s mg and your BAC mL. Set either your desired dose in mg or the units to draw—the other value updates automatically.

Open calculator

Adjusting BAC water

If you change the volume of bacteriostatic water, run the numbers again before dosing. Even a small shift in mL alters mg per unit, so reconfirm the new draw for your target amount.

Approaches

Microdosing

Smaller amounts more frequently keep levels steady, minimize side effects and make course corrections easier.

Full dosing

Larger amounts less often suit protocols that call for it or when convenience matters. Track how you feel and adjust within your plan.

Common mistakes to avoid

  • Drawing before the powder fully dissolves
  • Hard shaking, which foams and traps air
  • Changing BAC volume but not recalculating units
  • Guessing doses without writing them down
  • Reusing syringes—always use a fresh sterile one
  • Injecting too fast; press slowly and steadily
  • Not rotating injection sites; rotate to reduce irritation
  • Injecting into an inflamed or irritated area

Good practice

Getting the most from your plan

  • Hydrate consistently with water and electrolytes
  • Prioritize quality sleep
  • Move your body regularly—walk, stretch or lift
  • Note how you feel and adjust as needed

Subcutaneous technique

  • Use a new sterile syringe each time
  • Common sites: lower belly (away from the navel), outer thigh, back of arm
  • Pinch the skin, insert gently, depress the plunger slowly, withdraw smoothly
  • Rotate sites to minimize irritation

This guide is educational. Products are for research use only. Double check your plan and your math.




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