Melanotan-II in Oil

RzSco

Member
It would be handy if I could just inject my MT2 along with my cruise TRT in the same syringe.
I've read that combining water and oil in the same syringe is a good recipe for an abcess so I'd rather not do that.
I couldn't find anything about MT2's oil solubility. Has anyone tried it for making an intramuscular melanotan that can be injected in the same syringe with steroid oils?
 
I don’t know if it will damage the mt2 or not.. but if you can inject test suspension in water, and test oil together I don’t see why not.. just only mix them in the syringe, and make sure not to get any of either into the other.

edit: is mt2 supposed to go into IM though?
 
It would be handy if I could just inject my MT2 along with my cruise TRT in the same syringe.
I've read that combining water and oil in the same syringe is a good recipe for an abcess so I'd rather not do that.
I couldn't find anything about MT2's oil solubility. Has anyone tried it for making an intramuscular melanotan that can be injected in the same syringe with steroid oils?
The only reason water and oil would lead to an abscess is if one or both were contaminated. If both are sterile, this won't happen.
 
It would be handy if I could just inject my MT2 along with my cruise TRT in the same syringe.
I've read that combining water and oil in the same syringe is a good recipe for an abcess so I'd rather not do that.
I couldn't find anything about MT2's oil solubility. Has anyone tried it for making an intramuscular melanotan that can be injected in the same syringe with steroid oils?
Abcesses are caused by bacterial infections not oil. However any foreign body injected increases the risk of infection some ten fold. So using the proper oils that are compatible with biological systems is crucial. The magic is more what oil you use and using strict antiseptic technique. The needles and syringes should be sterile and with the skin flooded with plenty of isopropyl Alcohol for two minutes before injection. Suffice it to understand that the skin is not sterile as there are normal bacteria that exist on and in the skin appendages such as the hair ducts and sweat glands and oil glands down into the skin. As we inject the needle often pierces structures carrying the bacteria present with it to the site of injection. The vast majority of these bacteria are not of a type that cause infections under normal situations. Skin infections are quite rare except in people specially predisposed with serious medical or genetic conditions.
 
Abcesses are caused by bacterial infections not oil. However any foreign body injected increases the risk of infection some ten fold. So using the proper oils that are compatible with biological systems is crucial. The magic is more what oil you use and using strict antiseptic technique. The needles and syringes should be sterile and with the skin flooded with plenty of isopropyl Alcohol for two minutes before injection. Suffice it to understand that the skin is not sterile as there are normal bacteria that exist on and in the skin appendages such as the hair ducts and sweat glands and oil glands down into the skin. As we inject the needle often pierces structures carrying the bacteria present with it to the site of injection. The vast majority of these bacteria are not of a type that cause infections under normal situations. Skin infections are quite rare except in people specially predisposed with serious medical or genetic conditions.
Very interesting. Will be flooding with Alcohol for Two minutes before my injections!
 
Abcesses are caused by bacterial infections not oil. However any foreign body injected increases the risk of infection some ten fold. So using the proper oils that are compatible with biological systems is crucial. The magic is more what oil you use and using strict antiseptic technique. The needles and syringes should be sterile and with the skin flooded with plenty of isopropyl Alcohol for two minutes before injection. Suffice it to understand that the skin is not sterile as there are normal bacteria that exist on and in the skin appendages such as the hair ducts and sweat glands and oil glands down into the skin. As we inject the needle often pierces structures carrying the bacteria present with it to the site of injection. The vast majority of these bacteria are not of a type that cause infections under normal situations. Skin infections are quite rare except in people specially predisposed with serious medical or genetic conditions.


Would you recommend a wipe with Chlorhexidine Solution in it also prior to injection?
 
Yes most experts would prefer the use of chlorhexidine but Isopropyl Alcohol is age proven. It is rare and yet few bother to rub well and also wait the 2 minutes even in the surgical practices. I did some over 25,000 skin surgeries and never had a single infection in my career and we did not do strict sterile procedures 90% of the time either. Infections are so uncommon but we must still respect the issue very carefully.
 
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