Activity
Mon
Wed
Fri
Sun
Mar
Apr
May
Jun
Jul
Aug
Sep
Oct
Nov
Dec
Jan
Feb
What is this?
Less
More

Memberships

Peptide Resource Center

25 members • Free

4 contributions to Peptide Resource Center
Tutorials
Is anyone interested in a tutorial> What kind? 1. Reconstitution 2. Filtering 3. Preparing Insulin pens
0 likes • 3h
1 and 3
Question
@Kiki Riki the vials that I was sent, I noticed that each of them have BAC water with them. Thank you by the way. Is the BAC water already the right amount I need to use to reconstitute them? Also one said do not refrigerate. Is that the lipo-c one? One more question- on the NAD plus, the powder is all at the top of the vial. Is that ok?
Dosing and reconstitution
Hello, I am currently taking a compounded Tirzepitide. I believe it is a 2ml bottle that contains 6 mg of Tirzepitide. I draw up .42 units each time which is a very low dose. How do I do the same dose with a 20 mg bottle of Tirzepitide?
0 likes • 10d
I think my current dose is 2.5 mg which is still the starter dose. I get pretty sick if I take too much so I am microdosing it. I plan to stay on this dose. This is with my compounded one, not the new 20 mg vial.
0 likes • 8d
No I am still a little confused and just want to make sure it matches my current compounded dosage above.
Easy BAC water concentration formula - mix it up!
💧 How Much Water Do You Actually Need for Peptides? This is one of the most confusing parts for people — and it really doesn’t have to be. 🤔 Why This Confuses So Many People - Peptides come in different vial sizes (10 mg, 20 mg, 30 mg, etc.) - Everyone prefers different shot sizes - Adding more or less water changes the concentration - So instead of calculating… people start guessing 👉 The good news: there’s a simple formula that works every time. ✅ The Simple Formula Water (mL) = Peptide amount (mg) × 0.1 That’s it. Just multiply the total mg in your vial by 0.1. 📌 Examples 10 mg peptide 10 × 0.1 = 1 mL water 20 mg peptide 20 × 0.1 = 2 mL water This keeps things clean, consistent, and easy to calculate. 💉 How This Converts on a 100 IU Insulin Syringe 1 mL = 100 IU With this formula: 1 mg = 10 IU 0.5 mg = 5 IU 2 mg = 20 IU 👉 Example: 10 mg + 1 mL water Drawing 1 mg = 10 IU on the syringe 🧠 Why This Method Is So Helpful : No guessing Easy math - Works for any peptide - Makes reading the syringe straightforward ✨ Exact dosing made simple. If you ever feel unsure, ask inside the group — that’s what we’re here for 💛
0 likes • 13d
How long will a vial last once this is done?
1-4 of 4
Brittany Stark
1
2points to level up
@brittany-stark-6637
Mom of 2 kids and live in Texas.

Active 3h ago
Joined Jan 28, 2026