hahaha..this is one crazy thread.
hahaha..this is one crazy thread.
I would be interested to see some manufacturers recommendations regarding temperatures.
You are injecting it into your muscles because you are trying to get sustained release of the hormone into your blood stream over time. By warming it and increasing viscosity, you are dispersing the drug through a larger than recommended area, and likely increasing the levels too rapidly, and then on the back end, shortening the duration of the release.
Not only that, tap water is not sterile to the people using that method, be careful not to get it on your needle.
As to the pain, I have given thousands of injections to hundreds of people, and there is little that can be accomplished outside of attempting to relax when receiving it.
Also, if a sticky syringe is bothering you, you can "lubricate" the syringe by just taking out the new syringe and without anything in it, running it back and forth a few times rapidly. This will allow the gaskets to "warm up" and slide easier when you are pushing..
Just in my experience here.
i also am a fan of heating up before injecting, it def helps a little, plus ever since i have started heating up the compound before injection i have not got the test flu
you would need quite a bit of heat to melt the rubber stopper, a heat gun might do it, but i doubt a hair dryer willThanks guys, i just thought the plastic or rubber stopper would melt a bit due to the heater.
i sent a question to the lab that produces the gear i buy asking about heating the compound up regarding on how much heat it would take to potentially alter the compound or affect it in any way but i havent received a reply, does anybody know at what point could heating the compound be potentially damaging to the compound?
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