TheEngineer
GLP-1 Apprentice

ADDING IPAMORELIN INTO A VIAL OF TESAMORELIN FOR THE PERFECT DOSE WITH LESS PINS.
MATH TO GET 1MG TESA + 200mcg IPA PER DOSE
1. Both peptides form a true solution (not a suspension)
Tesamorelin and Ipamorelin are acetate salts of peptides. They are highly water-soluble in bacteriostatic water.
When fully dissolved, the peptide molecules exist as individual molecules (or very small solvated clusters) dispersed among the water molecules.
This is a true molecular solution , not a suspension of particles that could settle or clump.
2. Brownian motion + diffusion = rapid, complete mixing
In any liquid at room temperature, molecules are in constant random motion due to thermal energy (this is called Brownian motion ).
This random movement causes molecules to spread from areas of higher concentration to lower concentration until the concentration is identical everywhere in the vial.
This process is governed by Fick’s laws of diffusion . For peptides of this size in water, the diffusion coefficient is high enough that in a small 2–4 ml vial, complete uniformity is reached in seconds to a few minutes after gentle swirling.
Swirling creates convection currents that speed up the process even more.
Once this happens, the solution is homogeneous (uniform at the molecular level). There is no longer any “more Ipa in one part of the vial” or “more Tesa in another part.”
3. There is no mechanism for the peptides to separate again
Both peptides are hydrophilic (water-loving) and have similar chemical properties in bac water.
There is no chemical reaction, precipitation, crystallization, or hydrophobic effect that would cause one peptide to clump or separate from the other.
Gravity has no meaningful effect on dissolved molecules at this scale (they do not “settle” like sand in water).
Entropy (the natural tendency toward disorder) actually favors the mixed state.
As a result, once mixed, the solution stays homogeneous indefinitely (as long as the peptides don’t degrade from heat, light, or time).
4. Therefore, every accurately measured volume contains the exact proportion
Concentration = total mass of peptide ÷ total volume of solution.
Because the solution is homogeneous, any subsample (e.g. 0.2 ml) has the exact same concentration as the whole vial.
This is why pharmacies can make compounded multi-peptide vials that deliver consistent doses from the first draw to the last.
In practice, this is the same principle that allows insulin pens, multi-vitamin IV bags, and thousands of daily peptide users to mix compounds reliably. The science of homogeneity is solid — the solution will be perfectly even.
Exact Math (Step-by-Step)
1. Tesamorelin reconstitution
10 mg Tesamorelin + 1.6 ml bac water
→ Concentration = 10 mg ÷ 1.6 ml = 6.25 mg/ml
2. Ipamorelin reconstitution
10 mg Ipamorelin + 2 ml bac water
→ Concentration = 5 mg/ml
3. Transfer
Add 0.4 ml of the Ipamorelin solution into the Tesamorelin vial.
Amount of Ipamorelin added = 0.4 ml × 5 mg/ml = 2 mg
4. Final mixed vial
o Total Tesamorelin = 10 mg
o Total Ipamorelin = 2 mg
o Total volume = 1.6 ml + 0.4 ml = 2.0 ml
Final concentrations :
o Tesamorelin = 10 mg ÷ 2.0 ml = 5 mg/ml
o Ipamorelin = 2 mg ÷ 2.0 ml = 1 mg/ml
5. Injection draw
Draw 0.2 ml (20 units on a U-100 insulin syringe) from the mixed vial.
What you actually get :
o Tesamorelin = 0.2 ml × 5 mg/ml = 1 mg
o Ipamorelin = 0.2 ml × 1 mg/ml = 0.2 mg = 200 mcg
Perfect 1:1 proportion every single time .
MATH TO GET 1MG TESA + 200mcg IPA PER DOSE
1. Both peptides form a true solution (not a suspension)
Tesamorelin and Ipamorelin are acetate salts of peptides. They are highly water-soluble in bacteriostatic water.
When fully dissolved, the peptide molecules exist as individual molecules (or very small solvated clusters) dispersed among the water molecules.
This is a true molecular solution , not a suspension of particles that could settle or clump.
2. Brownian motion + diffusion = rapid, complete mixing
In any liquid at room temperature, molecules are in constant random motion due to thermal energy (this is called Brownian motion ).
This random movement causes molecules to spread from areas of higher concentration to lower concentration until the concentration is identical everywhere in the vial.
This process is governed by Fick’s laws of diffusion . For peptides of this size in water, the diffusion coefficient is high enough that in a small 2–4 ml vial, complete uniformity is reached in seconds to a few minutes after gentle swirling.
Swirling creates convection currents that speed up the process even more.
Once this happens, the solution is homogeneous (uniform at the molecular level). There is no longer any “more Ipa in one part of the vial” or “more Tesa in another part.”
3. There is no mechanism for the peptides to separate again
Both peptides are hydrophilic (water-loving) and have similar chemical properties in bac water.
There is no chemical reaction, precipitation, crystallization, or hydrophobic effect that would cause one peptide to clump or separate from the other.
Gravity has no meaningful effect on dissolved molecules at this scale (they do not “settle” like sand in water).
Entropy (the natural tendency toward disorder) actually favors the mixed state.
As a result, once mixed, the solution stays homogeneous indefinitely (as long as the peptides don’t degrade from heat, light, or time).
4. Therefore, every accurately measured volume contains the exact proportion
Concentration = total mass of peptide ÷ total volume of solution.
Because the solution is homogeneous, any subsample (e.g. 0.2 ml) has the exact same concentration as the whole vial.
This is why pharmacies can make compounded multi-peptide vials that deliver consistent doses from the first draw to the last.
In practice, this is the same principle that allows insulin pens, multi-vitamin IV bags, and thousands of daily peptide users to mix compounds reliably. The science of homogeneity is solid — the solution will be perfectly even.
Exact Math (Step-by-Step)
1. Tesamorelin reconstitution
10 mg Tesamorelin + 1.6 ml bac water
→ Concentration = 10 mg ÷ 1.6 ml = 6.25 mg/ml
2. Ipamorelin reconstitution
10 mg Ipamorelin + 2 ml bac water
→ Concentration = 5 mg/ml
3. Transfer
Add 0.4 ml of the Ipamorelin solution into the Tesamorelin vial.
Amount of Ipamorelin added = 0.4 ml × 5 mg/ml = 2 mg
4. Final mixed vial
o Total Tesamorelin = 10 mg
o Total Ipamorelin = 2 mg
o Total volume = 1.6 ml + 0.4 ml = 2.0 ml
Final concentrations :
o Tesamorelin = 10 mg ÷ 2.0 ml = 5 mg/ml
o Ipamorelin = 2 mg ÷ 2.0 ml = 1 mg/ml
5. Injection draw
Draw 0.2 ml (20 units on a U-100 insulin syringe) from the mixed vial.
What you actually get :
o Tesamorelin = 0.2 ml × 5 mg/ml = 1 mg
o Ipamorelin = 0.2 ml × 1 mg/ml = 0.2 mg = 200 mcg
Perfect 1:1 proportion every single time .
