Freezing Peptides

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aponte83

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Do we need to freeze our peptides? I have mine in the freezer and when I need to recon a vial I take it out and leave it on the counter for a few hours and then mix with bac. Is this process ok? What do you guys do ?
 
Its fine, glp1s in particular are very stable and there are some indications you could just leave them in a dark cabinet for a year with minimal loss. But the majority of people store them in the freezer.
 
aponte83 said:
Do we need to freeze our peptides? I have mine in the freezer and when I need to recon a vial I take it out and leave it on the counter for a few hours and then mix with bac. Is this process ok? What do you guys do ?
You don't even need to leave it out for hours. Mine go from the freezer to getting reconstituted, filtered, and then into the fridge.
 
SmokeySquid said:
You don't even need to leave it out for hours. Mine go from the freezer to getting reconstituted, filtered, and then into the fridge.
Really no thawing ?

How do you filter the peptide ? I’ve been seeing a lot of people saying they filter it but I haven’t seen how.
 
aponte83 said:
Really no thawing ?

How do you filter the peptide ? I’ve been seeing a lot of people saying they filter it but I haven’t seen how.
No thawing needed, there shouldn't even be anything to thaw.

Filtering requires, a luer-lock syringe, multiple luer-lock needles, a filter, and a sterile vial to receive the peptide.

draw the peptide into the syringe, toss that needle, attach the filter and new needle, inject into the new vial.
 
Filtering is totally optional. Do it as an added measure if you’d like or not. Subcutaneous, the risk without filtering is extremely low.
 
aponte83 said:
Really no thawing ?

How do you filter the peptide ? I’ve been seeing a lot of people saying they filter it but I haven’t seen how.
It's a powder. There is nothing to thaw.
 
zpped said:
Its fine, glp1s in particular are very stable and there are some indications you could just leave them in a dark cabinet for a year with minimal loss. But the majority of people store them in the freezer.
What are the indications?
 
echohunter said:
What are the indications?
degradation tests showing small differences between fridge vs cabinet. heat tests where vials were cooked at high temps for weeks. You'll have to join the testing group if you want to see them for yourself.
 
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