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Thanks for the insight! That makes a lot of sense, especially with bedside filtration being a thing in more advanced practices. It sounds like a straightforward step to improve both peptide quality and overall safety. I hadn’t thought about the potential contaminants in oils, either, glass, metal, and rubber particles aren’t something I’d want in my system, so filtering really does seem worthwhile. I’ll look into the best way to filter before each injection. Appreciate the tip on this!There's nothing exceptional about QSC peptides that makes them need to be filtered. However, filtering provides a number of benefits, improving the quality of the peptide, and is a growing practice in the underground peptide community as well as leading edge medical practitioners. It's called "bedside filtration", and protein/peptide meds are filtered immediately prior to administration. It's demonstrated to result in better patient outcomes overall.
Oils are filtered for other reasons, mainly the risk of particulate contaminants you can and can't see because of the industrial environment they're made in. Glass shards, metal flakes, filter fibers, rubber stopper material are all commonly found in oils.
If you only drink filtered or bottled water, you should definately consider filtering the stuff you're injecting.

