Loading lessons…
Loading lessons…
Curated lessons across 8 learning paths — from first concepts to trial summaries and practical protocols. Pick your level, follow the curriculum, and build real understanding.
Where are you starting?
Choose a learning path below or search the library. Progress saves in your browser.
Pick a track — progress rings update as you complete lessons.
6 lessons
7mGrok says subQ Cerebrolysin doesn't work due to volumes. The real answer is more nuanced — and subQ is viable at research doses if you use the right solvent.
6mBAC water works for most peptides. Acetic acid is for hydrophobic compounds that won't dissolve in BAC. Sterile water only for certain compounds like Cerebrolysin. Here's how to choose and troubleshoot.
9mMost peptide users eventually ask: BAC or sterile water? This guide breaks down tradeoffs, timing, and practical decision rules with a peptide-by-peptide reference workflow.
8mReconstituting peptides is simpler than it looks. This guide walks you through every step — from choosing the right BAC water volume to calculating units on your insulin syringe.
The complete guide to safely reconstituting peptides, including dosage calculations and best practices.
Understand why bacteriostatic water is essential for peptide reconstitution and how to use it properly.
Also available at /blog for legacy links.