Sustanon 250, Bad PIP In Quad

Hey everyone,

First of all thank you all for your help in my previous thread I appreciate your input.

Anyway for those who didn’t see it I was very symptomatic and had a t level of 10.6, then another at 9.9 but the NHS said I was just still depressed and sent me for more counciling, offered to stack another antidepressant and give me Viagra to sort me out.

I couldn’t be arsed with their crap any more, in fact it took a year to get them to even test me for low t. So I borrowed some money and got an appointment with Dr Savage.

After researching and looking at my blood results I was fully expecting a trial of clomid however he said I’m sort of between primary and secondary and it probably wouldn’t be effective so offered gel or injections.

I have kids so I opted for the jabs. He’s prescribed me .5ml per week of sustanon 250 for a month and adjust after bloods.

So first my Mrs wanted to do my jab but shit out and nearly fainted at the thought of it when the needle was in her hand.

So I done it myself in my quad, I done everything right.

23g needle went through my quad with surprisingly no pain whatsoever and I aspirated with no blood then I took probably 30 seconds to inject the sustanon.

But I feel like I’m constantly getting kicked in the led it’s dead how long does this last and any tips to stop it?

Also how do you open the ampoules without cutting your fingers, I watched videos and it looked so easy but my lid part shattered into my thumb.

Also how long does it take for the sustanon to reach full saturation over the weeks.

Thanks in advance for the input.

Stephen

The first couple injections for ever muscle I’ve hit (quads, delts, glutes, hip thing) all had some tenderness and pain in the muscle. After those first couple times it doesn’t seem to hurt. My only gripe with (my) quads is they seem to be covered in nerves. Seems every other one hits a nerve.

Thanks mate, would using a 25g instead of a 23g make a difference?

I’m using aspen sust by the way.

Thanks again

I use cypianate. I highly doubt needle size plays a role. I think it has more to do with injecting a foreign substance into a virgin muscle.

Aah makes sense really, do you get the feeling that the juice is in there it’s a weird feeling.

To be honest it’s not as bad today as it was yesterday just feels like I have had a blow to the leg, not dead leg, more just tender to touch now.

Thanks again.

P.s. tell me to piss off with all these stupid questions if they’re daft haha

Yep, exactly what it feels like. Keep trying, it gets better.

Thanks again for your patience mate, I appreciate the help.

I’ve got email and phone access to my doctor but I don’t really want to bombard him with probably silly questions (I don’t want to bombard you lot either haha) but I think the replies will be quicker on here from very experienced guys.

Anyway I’d rather have a sore muscle rather than a fucked up head and miserable life.

Thanks again mate and have a great day.

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It is the propionate in the mixture. The first couple times people do prop it hurts. This is because propionic acid is used to make the propionate ester.

You should get used to it after 3-4 shots.

Man I remember the first time I injected 150mg of propionate alone, my delt swelled up like a softball.

I use 29 gauge insulin syringe because they do not cause soreness, you might need a 1ml insulin syringe is injecting larger doses. You could try a 27 gauge which is easier to load.

Ouch that sounds absolutely horrible. I had absolutely no swelling just an unimaginable amount of pain.

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Thanks mate, I only do .5ml so I’ll order a few different sizes.

What’s the difference with insulin syringes? Is it literally just the needle guage or is the whole thing different?

Edit: I’ve just been out and got some insulin syringes. They are only 25g but they are shorter. They are about 5/8 inch.

Will that make a difference? I’m very lean if that helps.

Thanks

The problem with 25 gauge syringe is there is a dead space that traps Test and you will need to use more and may run out before your refill. Insulin syringes do not have a dead space and therefore medicine isn’t wasted.