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This page runs a simple reconstitution worksheet: total peptide in the vial (mg), how much liquid you add (mL), and your target injection (mcg). It reports concentration, how many mL to draw, how many U-100 insulin units that is (100 units = 1 mL), and how many full target-doses fit in the vial.
The math assumes ideal mixing: mg/mL = vial mg ÷ diluent mL, with no correction for powder volume, loss on the needle, or whether the label mass matches what you actually have. Real preparation still depends on technique, the right syringe type, and product-specific instructions.
Diluent choice (e.g. bacteriostatic water vs another vehicle) is not computed here — only the numeric volume you type. Nothing on this page replaces a clinician, pharmacist or approved labeling.
Labeled peptide in the vial (mg), total diluent you will add (mL), and desired dose per shot (mcg). Same formulas for BAC water or another sterile diluent — you are only telling the tool the volume.
Concentration = vial mg ÷ mL added (powder volume ignored). Syringe units = U-100 only (100 units per mL).
100 units = 1 mL on a U-100 insulin syringe.
Disclaimer: Mathematical estimates only — not medical advice, prescribing, or a substitute for sterile technique and verified product information.