4mm or 8mm needle? Doc's got me questioning!

I've always filtered as a precaution, but knowing for sure a batch isn't sterile hits different. Since health is the whole point, I'm throwing this one out. I have a year's supply frozen anyway, I've had cellulitis from an injection before and it wasn't fun, and I'd always wonder if I did the filtering well enough.
 
Hoping it goes backwards for you. My first pen hit me with a $100 copay instead of the $25 I expected, but pen #2 came through at $25. Who knows what the mix-up was. Still prefer the real thing at $100 over generic at $150+ though.
 
my mom wants to pin ghk daily but poor depth perception makes drawing from vials hard. sterility issue if i prep her dose the night before with cap on, keep in mini fridge, she injects in the morning?
 
Used my stomach two years but the acid reflux, sulfur burps, and headaches were brutal. Switched to my thigh — way less symptoms but also less appetite suppression. My doc said try different spots, no real medical reason, just anecdotes. Back of the arm might work too.
 
A 50ml sterile water + 0.5ml benzyl is under €2. Add five 10ml vials, syringe, swab — about €10 without shipping 🥲 Honestly never stressing about BAC again. Thanks y'all 🥰
 
bpc near the injury site and tb systemically. i've used both for shoulder stuff. daily collagen peptides + c + hyaluronic acid + glucosamine helps too.
 
8mm for drawing from a vial helps reach the bottom and reduces air bubbles. For subcutaneous injection, 4mm is sufficient for most body types. Different lengths for draw vs inject is a common approach.
 
The 4mm needle working well is the answer - depth variation matters for subcutaneous placement and 4mm delivers reliably without going IM. The filtering habit is worth keeping for peptides: sterilizing after reconstitution reduces contamination risk on every draw. The holdup loss is negligible over a full vial.
 
4mm is correct for subcutaneous GLP-1. 8mm risks going intramuscular for lean builds, which changes the absorption profile. Your instinct is right.
 
8mm is worth considering if 4mm isn't hitting tissue correctly or at deeper injection sites - if your current approach is working without issues, that's the more relevant data point than the general preference.
 
The 31g 8mm combination is the typical crossover point between the two common options - it gives reliable reach into subcutaneous tissue in most body areas while staying thin enough to minimize discomfort. Drawing slowly from the vial prevents the air bubbles that make the last draw frustrating with thinner gauges.
 
Back
Top