So I’m starting my first cycle of TRT and I will be injecting subcutaneously EOD.
I understand some people use insulin needles, I’m not super comfortable with the idea of drawing and injecting with the same needle.
I’ve been looking for 0.5ml lure lock needles but haven’t found any. I’m likely going to do 27G 1/2” for the stomach fat. I’ve found 1ml lure locks but I’d prefer the half ml for exact dosing purposes.
Can anyone provide some insight?
Cycling would be for someone abusing T/AAS for the sole purpose of gaining muscle/strength beyond or better yet well beyond one's natty genetic potential!
You know that chemically enhanced look that one could never achieve let alone maintain natty.
It's a dead end road in the long-run when it comes to possibly jeopardizing your long-term health let alone would be a lifelong commitment if you plan on sporting/maintaining that fake build!
We are using exogenous T to treat hypogonadism and improve our overall health/well-being!
The goal is to achieve a healthy trough FT level in order to achieve relief/improvement of low-T symptoms, minimize/avoid sides and more importantly maintain healthy blood markers long-term.
Key here being long-term!
Not sure what the fear is here when it comes to drawing/injecting using the same needle.
Should be virtually painless when drawing/injecting with the same needle 27-31G especially when using a higher gauge needle.
Yes drawing/injecting can be slower when using the higher gauge needles but it is nothing to fret over and if you are drawing/injecting low volumes of the oily solution it should be quick.
Most in the know on TTh are using an LDS insulin syringe whether 1 ml (100 unit), .5 mL (50 unit) or .3mL (30 unit) with fixed needle length (6MM, 8MM, 12.7MM) when injecting strictly sub-q or 12.7MM when injecting shallow IM.
One of the main advantages of using an LDS insulin syringe for testosterone therapy is that there will be minimal waste of medication due to low-dead space let alone you can draw/inject using the same needle (fixed).
Numerous benefits of using an LDS insulin syringe (fixed needle) as injections are virtually pain-free, minimal trauma to the tissue, minimizing any waste of medication, easier for many to measure accurate doses when injecting lower volumes, and you can draw/inject using the same needle to boot.
“Fixed insulin type syringes have no void space at the point where the needle joins the syringe, and so are known as Low Dead Space Syringes, which is sometimes abbreviated in the literature to LDSS. They are made like this so that the full accurate dose is delivered, and there is no waste”
Selecting the Devices There are many different syringes and needles, suiting many different procedures. It is important to choose the needles and syringes carefully according to the type of injection to be administered. For example, the length and gauge of the needle and type of syringe must...
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