gluter sight is your best bet mate, the larger the area then the less painful and more straight forward the injection is.
I personally am able to inject into my lats which i find quite easy, though i do tend to still go for the ventro-gluteal site as often as possible.
The reasoning for site rotation is basically just to stop certain sites getting to many holes in lol. I am certainly not a fan of bicep injections and doubt that most are.
If it’s not hot/red, then just leave it and it’ll probably go away by itself.
Bushy[/quote]
Okay, so same arm, different site. LOL! My buddy said I should shoot my right bicep to even out with the left one. I’ve done a few left bicep shots without any probs. It’s always painful, but “normal pain”. So I shoot the right one 3 days ago and it still hurts like hell. Today, I can actually press down on the actual injection spot and it doesn’t hurt that bad. But the inside of my arm (where it touches the lats) still hurts like hell. It’s red and a little warm to the touch. It doesn’t appear to be swollen, nor is there any of the pitting edema discussed in the sticky. Should I ride it out or start wolfing down some Keflex???
[quote]Steve8867 wrote:
Guys, noob question.
What is the reason for injecting in different muscles?
It seems that many or ALL of you hit many different ones.
Are there any muscles that are off limits?
Which ones would be best for ubernoob use?
[/quote]
You never want to continuously inject into the same muscle. That is a good way to get scar tissue build up, not to mention the increased chance for getting an abscess.
Always rotate injection sites. Personally, I never like to inject into the same muscle ore than once a week. This is pretty easy to accomplish when you are using longer esters.
Most common injection sites are the glute, ventro-glute, quad, and delt. That gives you eight different sites to choose from.
Ventro-glute is probably the best. followed by glute, then delt.