BPC-157 ships lyophilised at 5 mg per vial — white solid, freeze-dried under sterile inert gas. Cold-chain integrity is the rate-limiting step for activity; we ship in insulated packaging with gel packs, specifically because pentadecapeptide structures tolerate shipping temperatures up to around 30°C but degrade measurably beyond that.
Consumables
- Bacteriostatic water (0.9% benzyl alcohol in sterile water for injection) — 30 mL multi-dose vial recommended over single-use 2 mL
- Insulin syringe, 31G × 8 mm, 0.3 mL (30-unit) or 1 mL (100-unit) — the 100-unit is easier for volume precision at low-mcg doses
- Draw-up needle 21G × 38 mm for bac water transfer — not strictly required with thin-wall insulin syringes, but improves precision on first reconstitution
- 70% isopropanol swabs
The procedure
Alcohol-swab both rubber stoppers. Draw 2 mL bac water with the 21G needle. Insert the needle into the BPC-157 vial stopper at a 45° angle and release the plunger slowly — the partial vacuum in the lyophilised vial will pull bac water down the vial wall. Do not inject bac water directly onto the lyophilised cake. High-velocity impact at the liquid-solid interface shears peptide bonds and generates foam that is visible as persistent micro-bubbles.
Swirl. Never shake. Orbital motion over 30–60 seconds fully solubilises the powder. A transparent, colourless solution is the correct endpoint. Any of the following means the reconstitution or the product failed: visible particulate, opacity, foam that persists beyond 5 minutes, yellow or pink tint, or persistent undissolved material.
Concentration arithmetic
5 mg of BPC-157 dissolved in 2 mL of bac water yields 2500 mcg/mL. On a 100-unit insulin syringe, each unit equals 0.01 mL, which is 25 mcg of peptide.
Published research protocols for soft-tissue repair use 250–500 mcg daily subcutaneous — 10 to 20 units on the 100-unit syringe. Twice-daily splits (125–250 mcg × 2) produce steadier tissue exposure than once-daily bolus, though both protocols appear in the case-report literature with comparable reported outcomes.
Post-reconstitution stability
Refrigerated at 2–8°C, stability holds 4–6 weeks. Freezing extends shelf-life to 3–6 months but degrades activity across freeze-thaw cycles; aliquoting into sterile insulin syringes before freezing, thawed once each, is the workaround. Discard any vial that develops colour change, turbidity, or visible particulate regardless of how recent the reconstitution.