According to Janoshik the peps will stay viable after reconstituted much longer than you would safely want to use them. Degradation isn't the issue. Contamination is the primary problem. Ideally 30 days. Some people push it up to 90 days.
what no ! 1/4 of 120 mg is 30 mg !Hi!
I’m so sorry, I just have one question that I need an answer to. I’ve read loads but I don’t seem to be able to find an answer that I understand. Here goes…
So my rats dosage of tirz is 15mg weekly.
You can buy tirz in 15mg vials. If I fill it up with 3ml bac water then the rat would use the full vial once per week.
I get that you could buy tirz 30mg and use half the dose.
If you bought 120mg tirz you would use 1/4 weekly out of the vial and the vial would last 4 weeks.
However, when reconstituted- does the vial last more than 4 weeks in the fridge?
Also I’ve seen some buy 300mg tirz and I’m wondering how you can draw a small enough dose out of the vial to administer if you can only add 3ml of bac water to a vial?
Obviously, buying in larger quantities is the most economical option. But I’m trying to figure out how you dose that small for something like tirz 300mg.
I’m sorry if I’m being stupid. I’ve tried some dosage calculators and don’t seem to understand them.
Can you put more than 3ml bac in a vial? Is that the answer? Or are the larger mg vials larger in actual size to accommodate more water?
I haven’t even got to bitcoin yet. Are there any vendors that accept different methods of payment? I’ve seen PayPal mentioned but when I look on vendors posts the say bitcoin only.
Thank you everyone for all the information so far, I think if I get my head around this question then I will be ok. 😊
I just watched a podcast with Peter from Jano who described this exact scenario. A zero pep pen was further tested and determined to be insulin. Granted he was being asked about the 'worst he'd seen' but I think the number of digits in your risk percentages are, unfortunately, off.This is the same mindset I enter with. We are all taking some risk. Though, unless the vial is accidentally filled with insulin (Which would be completely insane mistake). Than its not going to kill you.
There is a chance you are 10% over or under dosed. I mean maybe even more than 10% if your supplier is exceedingly bad. The odds of getting the wrong dose? low to medium risk. The risk of immediate death upon injection? 0.0000000000000001%