๐Ÿงช Health Math Tool

Peptide Reconstitution Calculator

Calculate peptide concentration, draw volume, U-100 syringe units, vial dose count, and dilution comparison from known label and volume values.

โœ“ mg to mcg conversion โœ“ U-100 syringe units โœ“ Vial dose estimate โœ“ Visual dilution chart โœ“ Educational only
Medical disclaimer: This tool is for educational math only. It does not recommend, prescribe, or verify any peptide dose. Peptides, sterile handling, injection technique, storage, and dosing decisions must be reviewed with a qualified healthcare professional or approved research protocol. Last updated: May 31, 2026.

Enter Reconstitution Details

Formula: concentration = total peptide รท liquid volume. Draw volume = known dose รท concentration.
Draw Volume โ€” Enter values to calculate.
Concentration โ€”
Syringe Units โ€”
Total Peptide โ€”
Approx. Vial Doses โ€”
Check all units carefully. Do not use this page to choose a dose.
๐Ÿ“Š Dilution Comparison

Compare how different liquid volumes change concentration and syringe draw amount.

What Is a Peptide Reconstitution Calculator?

A peptide reconstitution calculator helps convert vial amount and liquid volume into concentration. It can then calculate how many milliliters or syringe units match a known dose amount. This is a unit-conversion tool, not a medical decision tool.

The calculator is useful when you already know three safe pieces of information: the labeled vial amount, the amount of liquid added, and the dose amount given by a qualified source. It does not tell you what peptide to use, whether a peptide is appropriate, or what dose a person should take.

Peptide Reconstitution Formula

The core formula is simple: convert the vial amount from milligrams to micrograms, then divide by the liquid volume in milliliters. For example, a 5 mg vial contains 5,000 mcg. If 2 mL of liquid is added, the concentration is 2,500 mcg per mL.

Concentration = total mcg รท mL added
Draw volume = known dose รท concentration
U-100 units = mL ร— 100

The same dose can require different draw volumes depending on how much liquid is added. More liquid creates a less concentrated solution, which means the draw volume increases. Less liquid creates a more concentrated solution, which means the draw volume decreases.

How to Use This Calculator Safely

1

Enter vial amount

Use the labeled vial amount in milligrams. Do not guess or mix labels from different products.

2

Enter liquid volume

Type the amount of diluent added in milliliters. This controls the final concentration.

3

Enter known dose

Only enter a dose that came from a qualified healthcare professional or valid protocol.

4

Check units twice

Review mcg, mg, mL, and syringe units carefully before using any result for discussion.

Worked Examples

Example 1: 5 mg vial + 2 mL
5 mg = 5,000 mcg
5,000 mcg รท 2 mL = 2,500 mcg/mL
250 mcg needs 0.10 mL, or 10 U-100 units
Example 2: 10 mg vial + 2 mL
10 mg = 10,000 mcg
10,000 mcg รท 2 mL = 5,000 mcg/mL
500 mcg needs 0.10 mL, or 10 U-100 units
Example 3: Same vial, more liquid
5 mg + 1 mL = 5,000 mcg/mL
5 mg + 5 mL = 1,000 mcg/mL
More liquid means a larger draw volume for the same amount

Important Health and Safety Notes

Reconstitution math is only one small part of safe handling. Sterility, storage, product quality, route, concentration, labeling, and clinical suitability are separate safety issues. A calculator cannot check those issues. If a value looks unusual, stop and ask a qualified professional before making decisions.

CalcMora also includes health tools for general education. For family genetics curiosity, try the Baby Eye Color Calculator. For general body-size screening estimates, the BMI Calculator may be useful, but it also does not replace professional medical advice.

Frequently Asked Questions

What does this peptide reconstitution calculator calculate?

It calculates concentration, draw volume, syringe units, total peptide amount in micrograms, and approximate number of doses in a vial based on values you enter. It does not choose a dose, recommend a peptide, or verify medical suitability.

Can this calculator tell me what peptide dose to take?

No. This calculator should never be used to choose a dose. It only converts a known dose into volume and syringe units. Dose decisions must come from a qualified healthcare professional or an approved research protocol.

What does U-100 mean?

U-100 means 100 syringe units per 1 mL. On that scale, 0.01 mL equals 1 unit, 0.10 mL equals 10 units, and 1 mL equals 100 units. This is a measurement scale, not a dose by itself.

Why do I need to convert mg to mcg?

Peptide vials are often labeled in milligrams, while smaller amounts may be discussed in micrograms. Since 1 mg equals 1,000 mcg, converting first keeps the math consistent and helps prevent unit errors.

Why does adding more liquid change the result?

Adding more liquid lowers the concentration. That means each milliliter contains fewer micrograms, so the same known amount requires a larger draw volume. Adding less liquid does the opposite and makes the solution more concentrated.

Is this calculator safe for real medical use?

It is an educational math tool only. It cannot check sterility, product quality, storage, route, prescription status, contraindications, or whether a peptide is appropriate. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional before using any medication or injectable product.