TB-500 Dosage Calculator: Reconstitution and Units

To calculate TB-500 dosage, divide your target dose (mg) by the vial concentration. Concentration = vial mg ÷ BAC water mL. For a 5 mg vial with 2 mL BAC water: concentration is 2.5 mg/mL. A 2 mg dose equals 0.8 mL (80 U-100 units) on a standard insulin syringe.

Example TB-500 Dosage Table

Common vial and BAC water combinations with calculated concentration, draw volume, and U-100 syringe units. For education only — verify your vial label before use.

Vial (mg)BAC water (mL)ConcentrationDose (mg)Draw (mL)U-100 units
5 mg2 mL2.5 mg/mL1 mg0.4 mL40 units
5 mg2 mL2.5 mg/mL2 mg0.8 mL80 units
10 mg2 mL5 mg/mL2 mg0.4 mL40 units
10 mg5 mL2 mg/mL2 mg1 mL100 units

How to Calculate TB-500 Dosage

Three steps convert any vial and BAC water combination into the exact volume to draw on a U-100 insulin syringe.

  1. Step 1 — Calculate concentration (mg/mL)

    Divide the total peptide in the vial (mg) by the volume of BAC water you added (mL). For example: a 5 mg TB-500 vial reconstituted with 2 mL BAC water gives 5 ÷ 2 = 2.5 mg/mL.
  2. Step 2 — Calculate draw volume (mL)

    Divide your target dose (mg) by the concentration (mg/mL). For a 0.5 mg dose at 2.5 mg/mL: 0.5 ÷ 2.5 = 0.2 mL. This is the exact volume to draw into the syringe.
  3. Step 3 — Convert to U-100 syringe units

    Multiply the draw volume (mL) by 100. For 0.2 mL: 0.2 × 100 = 20 U-100 units. Read this number on the unit markings of a standard insulin syringe.

Dosage Formula

Concentration formula

Concentration (mg/mL) = Vial mg ÷ BAC water mL

Draw volume formula

Draw volume (mL) = Dose (mg) ÷ Concentration (mg/mL)

U-100 syringe units

U-100 units = Draw volume (mL) × 100

These three formulas apply to any TB-500 vial, regardless of size. U-100 is the standard insulin-syringe scale: 100 units = 1 mL.

TB-500 Calculator Tool

Enter your vial strength, BAC water volume, and target dose below. The calculator outputs concentration (mg/mL), draw volume (mL), and U-100 units. Educational and research use only.

Example TB-500 Calculations

Step-by-step worked examples using common vial sizes. Results are for illustrating the math only.

5 mg vial + 2 mL BAC water, 2 mg dose

  1. Vial: 5 mg  |  BAC water: 2 mL  |  Target dose: 2 mg
  2. Concentration: 5 ÷ 2 = 2.5 mg/mL
  3. Draw volume: 2 ÷ 2.5 = 0.8 mL
  4. U-100 units: 0.8 × 100 = 80 units

10 mg vial + 2 mL BAC water, 2 mg dose

  1. Vial: 10 mg  |  BAC water: 2 mL  |  Target dose: 2 mg
  2. Concentration: 10 ÷ 2 = 5 mg/mL
  3. Draw volume: 2 ÷ 5 = 0.4 mL
  4. U-100 units: 0.4 × 100 = 40 units

TB-500 Reconstitution Guide

TB-500 is typically supplied as a lyophilised powder in 5 mg vials. Reconstitute with bacteriostatic water (BAC water):

  1. Wipe both stoppers with an alcohol swab.
  2. Draw 2 mL BAC water into a sterile syringe (standard for a 5 mg vial).
  3. Inject slowly along the vial wall. Gently swirl to dissolve — no vigorous shaking.
  4. The solution should be clear and colourless. Store at 2–8 °C.

TB-500 research protocols often use higher per-injection doses (1–4 mg) compared with peptides like BPC-157, so a standard 2 mL reconstitution gives convenient draw volumes for most scenarios.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I calculate the TB-500 draw volume?

Divide your target dose (mg) by the concentration (mg/mL). For 5 mg + 2 mL BAC: 2.5 mg/mL. For a 2 mg dose: 2 ÷ 2.5 = 0.8 mL = 80 U-100 units.

What are U-100 syringe units?

U-100 is the standard scale for insulin syringes. 100 units = 1.0 mL. That means 10 units = 0.1 mL, 50 units = 0.5 mL. Multiply any draw volume in mL by 100 to get the U-100 units reading.

Do I need to recalculate if I change the amount of BAC water?

Yes. Changing BAC water volume changes the concentration (mg/mL), which changes the draw volume for the same mg dose. Always recalculate using: concentration = vial mg ÷ BAC water mL, then draw volume = dose mg ÷ concentration.

What is TB-500?

TB-500 is a synthetic peptide derived from thymosin beta-4, studied in tissue repair research contexts. This calculator provides only the reconstitution math — it does not provide dosing recommendations.

Can I use a 1 mL syringe for TB-500 doses above 1 mg?

A 1 mL (100-unit) syringe holds up to 1 mL. At 2.5 mg/mL, a 2 mg dose = 0.8 mL, which fits comfortably in a 100-unit syringe. For doses requiring more than 1 mL, use a larger syringe or split into multiple injections.

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For educational and research purposes only. Not medical advice. Consult a licensed healthcare professional before making any medical or health-related decisions.