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Yes, that is what I mean. I do agree that the risk of contamination is there, but back loading seems to be a common practice with insulin syringes. I don't plan on pulling the plunger and setting it down on my desk or anything. Either hold it in my fingers like a cigarette or place it down on a alcohol swab.By backloading do you mean poping the back and filling them that way? If so NEVER do that, very easy to possibly contaminate and get infection
The seal will be fine. Not saying it's the safest way but I backload for my peps cause I draw from two vials. With the seros I just draw and stick. No backload. If I'm only drawing from one vial it's dull but not too bad. Plus that shits expensive. Don't want to wast one drop
If your only using one pep I would just preload a bunch at a time. The only reason you wouldn't do that is if you had two and then you wouldn't want to keep them mixed.
Didn't think about that. I'm sure it would be fine. I haven't ever done it but I know there are a lot of guys who do it. Maybe just load a handful of syringes. Keep us updated on the bpc 157 run. I'm curious about it. Thinking about getting some for my girlfriend. She has a torn rotator cuff. Where did you get it from?No worries of the peptide degrading once it is outside the vial? Just curious since the syringe isn't air tight.
Negative. Both sub q. Tb500 rotating inject sites and bpc157 all injects will be in the "tricep" of the injured arm.Are you doing site injections?
