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How to Calculate Peptide Dosing for Research — Concentration Calculator Guide
Step-by-Step Protocol
Step 1: Identify Your Peptide Vial Amount
Find the peptide amount on your vial label — usually expressed in milligrams (mg). Convert to micrograms for easier calculation: 1mg = 1,000mcg. A 5mg vial = 5,000mcg total peptide.
Step 2: Determine Your Desired Concentration
Choose a working concentration based on your protocol’s dose requirements. Common logic: if your dose is 500mcg, a concentration of 2,500mcg/mL means you draw 0.2ml (200µL) per dose — a practical volume for an insulin syringe.
Step 3: Calculate BAC Water Volume to Add
Formula: mL of BAC water = Total peptide (mcg) ÷ Desired concentration (mcg/mL). Example: 5,000mcg ÷ 2,500mcg/mL = 2ml of bacteriostatic water.
Step 4: Reconstitute at Your Calculated Volume
Add exactly the calculated volume of bacteriostatic water to your peptide vial using the slow-injection-down-the-vial-wall technique. See our full reconstitution protocol.
Step 5: Calculate Your Dose Draw Volume
Formula: mL per dose = Desired dose (mcg) ÷ Concentration (mcg/mL). Example: 500mcg ÷ 2,500mcg/mL = 0.2ml = 200µL.
Step 6: Convert to Insulin Syringe Units
On a U-100 syringe: Units = mL × 100. So 0.2ml = 20 units. Draw to the “20” mark on a standard insulin syringe for a 200µL dose.
Step 7: Verify and Document
Double-check your math before each use. Document your concentration, dose, and date in your research log. Consistent documentation enables reproducible experimental conditions.
Frequently Asked Questions
How do I calculate peptide concentration after reconstitution?
Concentration (mcg/mL) = Total peptide amount (mcg) ÷ Volume of BAC water added (mL). Example: 5mg (5,000mcg) vial + 2ml BAC water = 2,500mcg/mL.
How do I calculate how much to draw for a specific dose?
Volume to draw (mL) = Desired dose (mcg) ÷ Concentration (mcg/mL). Example: 500mcg dose at 2,500mcg/mL = 0.2ml = 200 microliters (20 units on U-100 syringe).
How do I convert mcg to units on an insulin syringe?
A U-100 insulin syringe has 100 units in 1ml. So 1 unit = 0.01ml = 10 microliters. For a dose of 200 microliters (0.2ml), draw to the 20-unit mark.
Related: Peptide Reconstitution Guide | Order Bacteriostatic Water | Certificate of Analysis
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