Hello, newbie here from USA .Wonderful success with peptides, need to learn how to keep it going and make my own.

CacaoPower

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So far so good with the Tirzepatide here. I am at starting dose. I have bought my own tirz that needs to be reconstituted but I’m not entirely sure on the correct measurements. The first one I got was like a kit, all measured out I just needed to mix the Bac water with the tirz.
No I have 20 vials of t10mg. But I’m not sure how much water to put in them. And how much to draw up on the syringe.
So far I’m still at starting dose. And it’s effecting so I want to stay there until it isn’t.

I take 12.5 units from a 60mg bottle now. But it’ll be out soon.

Any help is greatly appreciated!!
 

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For the sake of easy math - I like to add 1ml of bacteriostatic water to 10mg vials, so each mg is .1ml or 10 units on an insulin syringe. If you're on a 2.5mg dose, that would be .25ml or 25 units. You would have four of those per vial. (1ml / 4 = 0.25 mL & 10mg / 4 = 2.5 mg)

Or, if you wanted to match the concentration of your current product, you could add .5ml of bacteriostatic water to your 10mg vial. (.5ml / 4 = 0.125 mL or 12.5 units & 10mg / 4 = 2.5 mg)

At higher doses, you may want to re-evaluate so as to have less fluid to inject; you likely wouldn't want to inject 150 units -- one and a half syringes full -- for a 15mg dose. There's no right or wrong answer here, as long as the puck is fully dissolved, just make sure to always double check your math so that you're getting the intended dosage in mg, regardless of what concentration you choose.
 
For the sake of easy math - I like to add 1ml of bacteriostatic water to 10mg vials, so each mg is .1ml or 10 units on an insulin syringe. If you're on a 2.5mg dose, that would be .25ml or 25 units. You would have four of those per vial. (1ml / 4 = 0.25 mL & 10mg / 4 = 2.5 mg)

Or, if you wanted to match the concentration of your current product, you could add .5ml of bacteriostatic water to your 10mg vial. (.5ml / 4 = 0.125 mL or 12.5 units & 10mg / 4 = 2.5 mg)

At higher doses, you may want to re-evaluate so as to have less fluid to inject; you likely wouldn't want to inject 150 units -- one and a half syringes full -- for a 15mg dose. There's no right or wrong answer here, as long as the puck is fully dissolved, just make sure to always double check your math so that you're getting the intended dosage in mg, regardless of what concentration you choose.
Thank you so much. I think I will definitely stick to the easy math right for now. At least while I still very new to this.
 


Some links to help. Always double check the answers a calculator gives you make sense!
 
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