Community Review: IndiaMart Ancillaries

I’ve gotten Toradol, (Ketorolac), inj at urgent care for back pain, and also at the ER in a migraine cocktail. It’s an NSAID, but works decent enough when paired with a steroid + muscle relaxer. Dexamethasone is the steroid I’ve been rx both orally and inj. Both are relatively inexpensive and worth keeping on hand.
I'll order some at max out everytime on the deadlift. Haha nothing to hold me back
 
For those dealing with joint pain as a last resort, Kenacort is available from Abbott. Really cheap, and you can IM, or direct to the joint. If you keep it under 3 injections annually around 5ml each, it's great and relatively free from the negatives. But like anything else long-term prolonged use is a different story. I find this dosing to be great and if needed it offers great relief. The effects are king lasting often 3 months easily.


For those dealing with muscle spasms, contraction issues and such... You'll be hard pressed not to trust the old and true baclofen for muscle relaxation.
 
im sure that my being an absolute reed-heart has a lot to do with it, but transferring the searle testenate to a vial was one of the most annoying and difficult things ive done in this arena. maybe the worst thing.

the amps are simultaneously built to never break and also brittle as hell. idk how i avoided injury with how many times the top just disintegrated between my fingers.

"disposable" ampoule opener didnt help either. and the oil was so thick, i had so much trouble drawing it up. anyways, not trying to shit on your parade but i absolutely hated it

maybe ill heat up the amps next time. any amt of making that process easier would be worth it.

please lmk if you have an easier time transferring to vials if you're going that way. i got 25 and tapped out at 15. for the price, if i can figure it out id for sure get more.

I don't draw oils up
You break the amp
Backfill the syringe then push into a vial

10ml syringe..break a few amps then push through a filter.
 
For those dealing with joint pain as a last resort, Kenacort is available from Abbott. Really cheap, and you can IM, or direct to the joint. If you keep it under 3 injections annually around 5ml each, it's great and relatively free from the negatives. But like anything else long-term prolonged use is a different story. I find this dosing to be great and if needed it offers great relief. The effects are king lasting often 3 months easily.

Instead of injecting corristeroids I think a better approach is to inject hyaluronic acid. It's called viscosupplementation, FDA approved, usually done for knees but can be done in elbow etc. getting the product isnt difficult but I just don't know how to do it. An ultrasound machine would be good..

 
Instead of injecting corristeroids I think a better approach is to inject hyaluronic acid. It's called viscosupplementation, FDA approved, usually done for knees but can be done in elbow etc. getting the product isnt difficult but I just don't know how to do it. An ultrasound machine would be good..
Yes, another option. Great actually, but you must target individual joints. I was talking to banana about it, and I have medical family with the ultrasound. I only mention the Kenacort because it does work great, but certainly has negatives long-term. (Bone density and so on). Kenacort is easy for trigger site injections, because if you've never stuck a long pin into the actual joint, painless doesn't exist. You can't rough it by yourself, at least I can't. Screenshot_20260205_034618_ChatGPT.webpScreenshot_20260205_034626_ChatGPT.webp
 
Back
Top