Don't feel dumb at all — this is legitimately confusing and the compounding pharmacies don't always explain it well. Let me walk you through it step by step.
Step 1: Choose your concentration. You get to decide how concentrated to make it based on how much BAC water you add. Common choices for a 5mg vial:
- Add 2mL BAC water → concentration = 5mg / 2mL = 2.5mg/mL
- Add 2.5mL BAC water → concentration = 5mg / 2.5mL = 2mg/mL
- Add 5mL BAC water → concentration = 5mg / 5mL = 1mg/mL
Step 2: Convert mL to insulin syringe units. On a standard U-100 insulin syringe, 1mL = 100 units. So:
- 0.1mL = 10 units
- 0.01mL = 1 unit
Step 3: Calculate your dose volume. If you add 2mL of BAC water (making 2.5mg/mL):
- 0.25mg dose = 0.25 / 2.5 = 0.1mL = 10 units
- 0.5mg dose = 0.5 / 2.5 = 0.2mL = 20 units
- 1.0mg dose = 1.0 / 2.5 = 0.4mL = 40 units
For a starting dose of 0.25mg, I'd recommend adding 2mL of BAC water, which gives you nice round numbers. You'd draw up to the 10-unit mark on your syringe.
That 5mg vial at 0.25mg/week gives you 20 weeks of doses. Make sure to store in the refrigerator after reconstitution.