Tirzepatide 10mg User Guide

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Tirzepatide 10mg User Guide

This guide is for Tirzepatide 10mg. It walks through reconstitution, syringe math, conservative escalation, injection basics, side effects, and storage.

You can find this product here: GLP 2 Tirz.


SUPPLIES YOU’LL NEED


RECONSTITUTION (MIXING)

Each vial contains 10mg of tirzepatide. For this guide, add 2mL of bacteriostatic water.

Here’s what to do:

  1. Draw up 200 units total of bacteriostatic water.
  2. Inject the water slowly down the inside wall of the vial, not directly onto the powder.
  3. Swirl gently. Do not shake.
  4. Let it fully dissolve before drawing a dose.

With this mix, 1 unit on a U-100 insulin syringe = 0.05mg of tirzepatide.

Units on syringeApprox dose
5 units0.25mg
10 units0.50mg
25 units1.25mg
50 units2.50mg
100 units5.00mg

DOSING SCHEDULE

A conservative reference schedule starts at 2.5mg once weekly for 4 weeks, then increases slowly only if tolerated. Common prescription-style maintenance targets are higher, but the point is not to race upward. Stay at the lowest effective amount as long as it is working.

Do not increase dose faster than every 4 weeks. If side effects are meaningful, hold the current dose longer or step back down.


HOW TO INJECT

Watch this quick video, it covers the basic subQ process: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e9NGueNM03I

The basics:

  1. Wipe the top of the Tirzepatide 10mg bottle with an alcohol swab.
  2. Draw your dose into the syringe.
  3. Pinch a bit of belly fat or thigh, insert the needle, and push the plunger slowly.
  4. Done. Rotate injection sites to avoid irritation.

Disposal: Use a sharps container when available. At minimum, make sure exposed needles cannot poke anyone after use.


SIDE EFFECTS AND CAUTIONS

Common GLP-style side effects include nausea, reduced appetite, reflux, constipation, diarrhea, bloating, fatigue, headache, and dehydration. Eating smaller meals and avoiding greasy/heavy meals usually helps.

Extra caution: tirzepatide delays gastric emptying and may affect oral medication absorption. It is not something to combine with semaglutide, retatrutide, cagrilintide, or other appetite/glucose drugs without medical guidance. Avoid use without medical guidance if pregnant, breastfeeding, diabetic on glucose-lowering medication, history of pancreatitis, gallbladder disease, severe GI disease, kidney issues from dehydration, or personal/family history of medullary thyroid carcinoma or MEN2.

Pause and reassess if nausea is persistent, vomiting occurs, hydration becomes difficult, abdominal pain is severe, or symptoms feel unusual for you.


STORAGE

Keep the bottle in the fridge after reconstitution: cold, dry, and dark. Avoid repeated warm-ups, direct light, and unnecessary vial punctures.

Unreconstituted powder is usually more stable than mixed solution, but the fridge is still the better default. If the solution becomes cloudy, changes color, grows particles, or looks wrong, stop and do not use it.


RESEARCH NOTES

Questions?

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