Darkhorse08
New member
When injecting today I pulled back on the plunger and blood drew into the syringe. I withdrew but am now wondering if it is ok to inject the gear with small amount of blood in the syringe? Or is this shot wasted?
When injecting today I pulled back on the plunger and blood drew into the syringe. I withdrew but am now wondering if it is ok to inject the gear with small amount of blood in the syringe? Or is this shot wasted?
I wouldn't use it. It dosen't seem like it would be sterile anymore.
Just to play devil's advocate...how wouldn't it be sterile? It's his blood...
I think its more the fact that it was sterile up untill he injected, then when it came back out of the skin it was exposed to the air, and now this is some time later that he's asking the question so unless he does injections in a computer mother board clean room, probably would be best just to ditch it.
the juice never leaves the pin when aspirating, pin is the only thing not sterile. (love your avatar by the way, always makes me laugh)
thanks man. I guess i would just rather be safe than sorry.
the juice never leaves the pin when aspirating, pin is the only thing not sterile. (love your avatar by the way, always makes me laugh) and holy are u saying that the tissue getting into the pin would make it a bad idea to use again? please elaborate, not questioning u, just have had this happen to me once and i just replaced the needle and pinned another spot.
can never be too cautious when stickin needles in your body in the comfort of your "sterile" living room.![]()
As a health care professional, I wouldn't.The previous poster is correct in that once exposed to air, bacteria is present, especially since you have had it sitting for some time. When the needle gets moist, it is a breeding ground for bacteria (alcohol doesn't sterilize, only de-oils the skin to make it semi-clean). You should just draw the gear into a different syringe, or replace the needle if you have that kind. If it happens again, yes, just pull back the needle a bit without removing it from the muscle to get out of the vessel, aspirate, and go from there if your clear.
now that's a perfect explanation. weird though, your first post was medical advice?
wouldn't drawing the ear into a different syringe still pull some of the blood with it that came up into the syringe?