Cloudy looking peptides

jrod

Vet
Staff member
Joined
Jun 2, 2010
Messages
1,558
I can’t figure out why it happens, maybe one of you can explain.
I’ve had a couple different peptides of different compounds and different vendors turn cloudy a day or two after reconstitution.
What’s causing this? Any feedback is appreciated.
 
I can’t figure out why it happens, maybe one of you can explain.
I’ve had a couple different peptides of different compounds and different vendors turn cloudy a day or two after reconstitution.
What’s causing this? Any feedback is appreciated.
Don’t inject that mate. Sound bad.
 
I can’t figure out why it happens, maybe one of you can explain.
I’ve had a couple different peptides of different compounds and different vendors turn cloudy a day or two after reconstitution.
What’s causing this? Any feedback is appreciated.

I can’t figure out why it happens, maybe one of you can explain.
I’ve had a couple different peptides of different compounds and different vendors turn cloudy a day or two after reconstitution.
What’s causing this? Any feedback is appreciated.
I can’t figure out why it happens, maybe one of you can explain.
I’ve had a couple different peptides of different compounds and different vendors turn cloudy a day or two after reconstitution.
What’s causing this? Any feedback is appreciated.
I can’t figure out why it happens, maybe one of you can explain.
I’ve had a couple different peptides of different compounds and different vendors turn cloudy a day or two after reconstitution.
What’s causing this? Any feedback is appreciated.
I’ve had this happen a few times too with different compounds and vendors. Cloudiness a day or two after reconstitution usually comes down to a few things

• Temperature swings......Going warm to cold or leaving it out too long can make the peptide precipitate.
• Wrong solvent....Some peptides do better in bacteriostatic water. Using plain sterile water can make them break down faster.
• Peptide instability... Certain compounds just don’t stay stable long after mixing no matter what you do.
• Minor contamination....Even a tiny bit introduced when piercing the stopper can cause particles to form.
• Improper mixing....Shaking the vial can damage the structure and lead to cloudiness.

It doesn’t always mean it’s bunk, just that it degraded. Once it clouds, most people toss it. Curious what others have seen.
 
I’ve had this happen a few times too with different compounds and vendors. Cloudiness a day or two after reconstitution usually comes down to a few things

• Temperature swings......Going warm to cold or leaving it out too long can make the peptide precipitate.
• Wrong solvent....Some peptides do better in bacteriostatic water. Using plain sterile water can make them break down faster.
• Peptide instability... Certain compounds just don’t stay stable long after mixing no matter what you do.
• Minor contamination....Even a tiny bit introduced when piercing the stopper can cause particles to form.
• Improper mixing....Shaking the vial can damage the structure and lead to cloudiness.

It doesn’t always mean it’s bunk, just that it degraded. Once it clouds, most people toss it. Curious what others have seen.
Bad quality. Sounds like it is not what you really think you were buying. How is it labeled?
 
Powder could be really old. old insulin gets cloudy hgh gets cloudy when powder is to old or gets to hot when shipped. I wouldn't use.
 
this makes it interesting

I've had it go cloudy at recon. from using bac water that had been in fridge, not room temp.
I keep my water refrigerated and the peptides that haven’t been reconstituted are either stored in the freezer or fridge depending on usage.
First time it’s ever happened.
Appreciate the feedback!
 

Trending

Back
Top