The Great Pep Debate Tesamorelin!

Definitely the fridge. (But ideally not the fridge door due to movement.)

The brand name has stabilizers for room temperature, unlike the grey versions. Even the newest version of the brand name (Egrifta WR) is only for seven days. The older versions were for immediate use only.
 
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The question is are we getting Egrifta WR or Egrifta SV which all the protocols and storage recommendations are based upon or plain Tesamorelin not the formulated RX version. The answer is we have no idea and no data to reference.

Anecdotal evidence: My M and F TS's did a 90 day run it was kept in the freezer and then refrigerated. 1 vial lasted 2.5 days. IGF-1 went up: M 1.5X, F 4X. So storage "appeared " to have little impact.

Test your IGF-1 before and after and let us know how you stored it.
 
My biggest concern with grey reconned tesa would be sterility.

And the tesa itself would only degrade, especially after a few days.
 
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I have never let it go unrefrigerated but I once had a reconstituted vial sit refrigerated for 3 weeks while on vacation. I pinned it after returning and I got the familiar annoying increased heart rate. So at least some of the peptide survived after 3 weeks.
 
The Great Pep Debate Tesamorelin! should it be fridged after recon stay room temps?
Lets here what you think

Tested the ph both ways and 4.5-5 was normal on both
Fridge. Tests show that it starts degrading after 7 days at room temp. 30 days show virtually no change.
 
There is comparative testing showing degradation of Tesamorelin at 0, 7, 14, 21, and 28 days, stored at room temp vs in a refrigerator. I can't share the actual data, but the bottom line is that room temp was stable to 14 days, with ~1-2% purity drop for the 21 and 28 day measurements. Refrigerated was stable out to 28 days (<1% purity drop).
 
Definitely the fridge. (But ideally not the fridge door due to movement.)

The brand name has stabilizers for room temperature, unlike the grey versions. Even the newest version of the brand name (Egrifta WR) is only for seven days. The older versions were for immediate use only.
Oof. Glad I read this, I usually keep my peptides in the butter thingy with the window that closes 😂

Guess I'll be cleaning the fridge today to move them to a new home.
 
Absolutely love Tesamorelin and as an aside, have flown with kits multiple times internationally, reconstituted and experienced no major losses in effect. Same being said for times when I may have left it out on my desk versus returning immediately to refrigerator. Short periods away from freezer (if unconstituted or refrigerator once mixed) aren't a major concern.
 
Heard some people develop sudden immune response to it where they can’t breathe and need go to the er.
That's an anaphylactic allergic reaction which can happen with any medicine although yes it has specifically happened with these GH secretagogues. It's not a bad idea to have an epipen or nasal epinephrine just in case (I got neffy), but it's unlikely you'll have an issue if you didn't have an allergic reaction to it before IMO.
 
CJC 1295 (no dac), Ipamorelin, and Tesamorelin...these are the only peptides that I have ever had a negative reaction to. They left itchy welps that lasted a few days after pinnning. Not worth it for me but everyone is different. I'm even in the small percentage of people that GHK-CU doesn't sting. So it is a no go on any GH type peptides for me.
 
The question is are we getting Egrifta WR or Egrifta SV which all the protocols and storage recommendations are based upon or plain Tesamorelin not the formulated RX version. The answer is we have no idea and no data to reference.

Anecdotal evidence: My M and F TS's did a 90 day run it was kept in the freezer and then refrigerated. 1 vial lasted 2.5 days. IGF-1 went up: M 1.5X, F 4X. So storage "appeared " to have little impact.

Test your IGF-1 before and after and let us know how you stored it.
I'd bet you all the money I have that we are not getting the formulated RX versions, lol. It's tesamorelin with whatever standard excipients they've settled on as working for it.
 
I'd bet you all the money I have that we are not getting the formulated RX versions, lol. It's tesamorelin with whatever standard excipients they've settled on as working for it.
I know.😉
Sometimes sarcasm doesn't translate to the written word very well.
 
CJC 1295 (no dac), Ipamorelin, and Tesamorelin...these are the only peptides that I have ever had a negative reaction to. They left itchy welps that lasted a few days after pinnning. Not worth it for me but everyone is different. I'm even in the small percentage of people that GHK-CU doesn't sting. So it is a no go on any GH type peptides for me.
The other thing I forgot, that's equally awful, it straight massacred my sleep. Like I read most people sleep better with the gh peps, but I think my sleep couldn't have been any worse if I decided to set up my bed directly on Elm Street.
 

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