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napsgear
genezapharmateuticals
domestic-supply
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UGL OZ
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napsgeargenezapharmateuticals domestic-supplypuritysourcelabsUGL OZUGFREAK

Dark blood on pin out?

Dark blood has little to no oxygen. Veins carry blood back to the heart after bringing oxygen and shit to the rest of your body.

Exacto!!!! Arteries give bright red blood because they are heavily oxygenated. Dont sweat it cause its prob gonna happen again down the line.
 
I don't aspirate anymore! Aspiration is a myth! LOL When you go to a clinic or a hospital for a shot, does the nurse aspirate the injection? Hell NO! A 1,000mg/ml shot without any thing and I feel fine! I can't wait until next order! LOL

Aspiration isn't a myth bro. You might get lucky and not catch an emboli from a water based but if you mess up with an oil base your in a world of trouble. I am telling you this as a paramedic, the nurses you see are opening up themselves to a huge law suit when the cause the first pulmonary air emboli. Every paramedic and nurse I know still aspirate even in situations when time isn't a given. Some of us have been doing it so long that we actually do aspirate with out making it as noticible. Bro it takes a second or two to aspirate to be safe and a life time to recover from a mistake, play it safe in an already dangerous game.

To the main topic of the thread like the nurse said you more than likely hit a vein and went through and through, while attempting to reach the muscle. As long as there is no red stuff in the container when you aspirate your okay.
 
Hi,

What you guys mean when saying aspirate pls? It means when you slightly pull the plunger back once in, to check if a small rush of blood is in the syringe?
 
Thanks for the clarification. But this raised another point which it was not clear from the begining to me.
When injecting aas in the muscles (IM) these will be later slowly released and deposited in the blood, right? Why it would be a problem if you mistakenly inject in a vein and therefore they go directly in the blood?
 
There is a few reasons from concentration to substance viscosity. Your main concern is the actual viscosity of the substance that can cause everything from a stroke to myocardial infarction. You have to remember that a lot of these substances are very thick and and can potentially block some of the smaller arteries and veins in the body restricting blood flow or even completely blocking blood flow to muscles and organs just depending on what vessel is blocked.
 
It's scary to see Bros on here doing AAS and don't even know what aspirating is about. I'm stunned by the ignorance.
 
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