No, I'm NOT saying the highly acclaimed Cochran.org is not a legit source of information.
I'm saying that they are WRONG , that there is no research evidence which supports their comments for our short-chain amino acids, and that I'm quite confidently going to continue doing reconstitution MY WAY, Chef!
Neener neener neener
I AM being a bit of a cheeky monkey. HOWEVER, you may turn your well-honed OCD powers to finding actual research that pertains to our use-case with short peptides for a very long time and NOT FIND ANYTHING RELEVANT.
Anecdotal comments like the Cochran bloviating above ABOUND and many, many other armchair pontificators can be found too. Actual documented research? NOPE.
You will find cautions about "cavitation" caused by misuse of "ultrasonic de-aggregators" that are big as houses but absolutely nothing relevant for a 3ml vial and manual agitation.
CHEF, I'll stake my entire non-existent medical reputation on it!
/s
NOTA BENE
I know you realize this Chef but for the sake of everyone else who may be confused - COCHRANE HANDBOOK is an affiliate marketing organization.
Cochrane publish content designed to harvest names and emails of "peptide researchers" which they sell to their peptide-vendor client: Limitless Nooitropics.
Further, they solicit surfers with a Discount to their "Top-rated Vendor". Press the Buy Now Call To Action button and you'll instantly arrive at Limitless's ecommerce page.
And That's All Fine!
But no one should confuse Cochrane Handbook with an actual AUTHORITY on peptides.