Big vial worries?

I usually preload my syringes and store them in a 3D-printed case in my garage fridge (it only has drinks and gets cleaned regularly, so less mold risk). I sanitize the case before refilling.

For injection, I get my stuff, wash my hands, double-sanitize my skin, then inject, making sure the needle touches nothing but clean skin. I let the alcohol dry and inject right after showering with antibacterial soap.

It's extreme, I know. More than most need. But I've worked in research and medicine. I've seen gangrene and cellulitis. No thanks. Once you learn sterile procedures, it sticks with you; it feels wrong to do it any other way.
 
Me too! I graduated CST but quickly learned you need a license to be respected in medicine. So, five months later, I was doing the LPN thing.
 
I've seen people saying they stay on super low doses for the long haul. One person was on 0.5 for a year, then dropped down to 0.25! They said it's slower weight loss, but feels more sustainable. Makes sense to me.
 
Do 0.125 dose, half the sema starting amount. Usually 2 ml bac in 5mg vials since small amounts are hard to measure. In ten mg I'd use three or four ml. Three gets just under 4 units. Four gives you 5 units, way easier to track. Sounds like you nailed ten times what you wanted. Gatorade and hard candy will help until it passes. Maybe confused tirz dosing with sema.
 
Vial potency can fade over time. After a few months, you might only get 95% of the intended dose. If you're injecting 3.5mg at month three, it might work more like 3.33mg. Bacterial contamination is rare but you'd spot infection pretty fast. Keep using it unless something feels off.
 
Haven't been out of the 200s in over 10 years. 30 lbs down since December on Mounjaro for diabetes, and the weight loss is a huge bonus. Eating healthier, moving more, losing steady. In remission now, blood work is normal. This med really changed my life, confidence is back.
 
Sterility risk tracks with draw technique, not vial size - the concern is the same whether you're pulling from 10mg or 50mg. Consistent aseptic practice on each draw is what matters.
 
switched from sema to tirz b/c i was losing way too slow. dropping from 320 to 259 so far. sometimes you don't see it till you look at pics side-by-side. don't be hard on yourself if progress feels invisible—it's still happening.
 
Vial coring is a real concern on repeated draws - the rubber stopper can fragment if the needle angle or gauge is wrong. 23-gauge or finer at a slight entry angle is the standard for reducing fragment risk.
 
Fridge is the standard after puncture. Room temp works if fridge has extreme swings but most people stay with refrigerated. The bac water preservative handles repeated puncture - the question is degradation rate, not sterility.
 
Big vials make sense once dose is stable and storage is handled correctly. 50mg at 2.5mg weekly covers 20 weeks. The per-unit cost drops at scale but you need to be confident in the source before committing to that much.
 
Total mg on the label is the peptide amount. BAC water controls concentration. A bigger vial at low dose just means more supply, same per-dose math.
 
Inverted vial before pulling eliminates most pressure issues. The buildup usually comes from injecting air in first - skipping that fixes it.
 
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