PablinhoDoFavela
GLP-1 Apprentice

Does it make any difference?


Google Gemini said:Needle Length 90° Angle Depth 45° Angle Depth 6 mm 6.0 mm ~4.2 mm 8 mm 8.0 mm ~5.7 mm 10 mm 10.0 mm ~7.1 mm 12 mm 12.0 mm ~8.5 mm

Exactly this. Subcutaneous injection is targetting delivery to the subcutaneous fat layer under the dermis (collagen) of the skin. You’ll know you’re there when you feel the resistance of the dermis give way when you’vr punched through to the fluffy layer underneath, how you get there doesn’t matter. Once you know your anatomy, you can do whatever angle and speed you like.Calm Logic said:You can do 45 degrees if the needle is otherwise too long for you.
Like for a longer 12-mm insulin syringe, I will use a 45-degree angle. For 8-mm, I usually do 90 degrees (also pinching the skin), but 45 degrees would be fine too. Anything less than 8 mm, I only do at 90 degrees.
For a 12-mm needle, the insertional length at 45 degrees would be 8.5 mm:

Vash_ said:I pinch an inch and jab it straight in. I use 29g x 8mm needles.
Both 45° and 90° can be correct for subq injections..... it depends on needle length and the person.PablinhoDoFavela said:Does it make any difference?

Labcat said:For some of the peptides that might cause more mast cell reaction, some people suggest going deeper, like 8-12mm, to keep it further from the mast cells since they tend to be located around the upper dermis.
Jfrick11 said:Average weighted people have about 10 - 30 mm of subcutaneous fat in the stomach area, even lean folks usually have at least ~8–10 mm there. That’s why short insulin needles work so well.
Google Gemini said:Comparative Analysis of Subcutaneous Depths: Physiological Impact and Mast Cell Gradient
Feature Superficial (4 mm) Intermediate (8 mm) Deep (12 mm+) Mast Cell Density High (Near dermal junction) Moderate Low (Septal distribution only) Vascularity Dense capillary network Stable/Moderate Sparse (Low blood flow) Absorption Rate Rapid and predictable Consistent/Standard Slow (Depot-like release) Risk of IM Injection Negligible Low (except in lean areas) Significant (site-dependent) Tissue Resistance Firm (High collagen) Low (Adipose lobules) Minimal (Deep fat stores) Common Application Modern Insulin, Pens Standard Subq, Vaccines Large Volume, Hormones
Google Gemini said:Tirzepatide Absorption and Release Profile by Subcutaneous Depth
Depth Release Speed Time to Peak (T-max) Clinical Effect / Experience Superficial (4 mm) Slightly Faster 8–24 Hours Highest capillary access; highest mast cell reaction (welts/itching). Standard for auto-pens. Standard (6 mm) Stable 18–36 Hours The modern compromise. Deep enough to reduce surface "leakage" but very safe from muscle in most areas. Intermediate (8 mm) Consistent 24–48 Hours Often preferred to bypass the "itchy" mast cell layer. Best for those with frequent Injection Site Reactions (ISRs). Deep (12 mm+) Slightly Slower 48–72 Hours Slow "depot" release. High risk of Intramuscular (IM) hits in lean users, causing rapid spikes/nausea.
Why the 6 mm option is popular:
Many users who find 4 mm too shallow (fear of the needle not going deep enough) and 8 mm too intimidating find 6 mm to be the "Goldilocks" zone. It is deep enough into the adipose tissue to move away from the most sensitive dermal-subcutaneous junction (where mast cells are densest) but still short enough that you don't need to "pinch an inch" as aggressively as you would with an 8 mm or 12 mm needle.
Note: While the total amount of medication absorbed (AUC) is the same across all depths, the 4 mm depth interacts most heavily with mast cells , making it the most likely to cause itching or redness.
Google Gemini said:Estimated Subcutaneous Tissue Thickness by BMI and Anatomical Site
BMI Category Abdomen (mm) Thigh (mm) Upper Arm (mm) Underweight ( 35) 45+ 30+ 25+
Calm Logic said:Tables for comparison:
This is what I doVash_ said:I pinch an inch and jab it straight in. I use 29g x 8mm needles.