How to Reconstitute Retatrutide Safely 🔬
Reconstituting Retatrutide properly is essential for reliable results in research. Here’s a step-by-step guide + calculator tips to help you do it right:
What You Need:
Lyophilized Retatrutide vial (e.g. 10 mg)
Bacteriostatic water (the solvent)
Sterile syringes & needles
Alcohol swabs & gloves
Labels + marker
Refrigeration (2-8 °C)
Step-by-Step:
Clean the vial top with alcohol.
Draw up the correct amount of bacteriostatic water (use a calculator to decide volume).
Inject the water slowly down the inner wall of the vial → this reduces foaming.
Swirl gently until fully dissolved (no clumps). Avoid shaking.
Check clarity of the solution.
Label vial (concentration & date), store in fridge.
Calculator Examples:
If you mix 10 mg with 2 mL water → concentration = 5 mg/mL
0.1 mL = 0.5 mg, 0.2 mL = 1 mg
If you use 4 mL water → 2.5 mg/mL, etc.
Safety & Storage Tips:
Keep reconstituted Retatrutide refrigerated.
Discard after 30 days OR whenever the solution gets cloudy or shows changes.
Use sterile equipment every time.
Don’t freeze. Keep away from heat/light.
Common Mistakes to Avoid:
Shaking the vial
Injecting water too fast → causes foam
Skipping cleaning or using non-sterile materials
Using wrong diluent (only bacteriostatic water recommended)
Miscalculating dose
⚠️ Reminder: All information is for research use only. Not medical advice. Always follow institutional protocols, use calculators, and double-check every step.










