Tried needle-less injection - worked pretty good

NeilB

New member
My last cycle of Tren/prop/SD was back in August and during that time my registered nurse (RN) wife had been very kind and supportive in giving me my injections as time permitted, using of course the usual syringe/needle. Just last Monday, she brought home from the hospital a device supposedly gives injections w/o using needles -

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Her charge nurse said that she needed to review the manual on how to use it properly. Long story short, she tried it on me by giving me one mL of Deca on my right shoulder. Needless to say, I did not feel much when she pulled the trigger. I felt a little thud on my skin, a speck of blood, and that was it. But the way she had the nozzle of the device firmly and deeply implanted into my skin - she was pushing it really hard to administer the jiuce intramuscularly - as the manual instructed made me think that it went in to my deltoid properly.

It's Wed and I feel no pain, no swelling from the injection site.

But damn, this device costs $950 a piece. Oh well, my wife brought it back today to the hospital. :sad:
 
g4ud1n said:
How would that work out if you did it over a vein though :think:


I second that. With a device with no option for "aspiration", it seems liek there could be alot of potential risks if one were to hit a vein. Also i wonder what it feels like if u hit a nerve :blink:
 
I asked my wife about the chances of hitting a vein and according to her and from the other physicians and nurses from the same hospital department, so far they have had no reported incident, and they have been using these devices for the last year or so, and administered drugs like Fuzeon (AIDS/HIV medication) to HCG/HGH, intramuscularly and subq.

The only problem is Bioject sells only to hospitals, and medical practicioners.
 
call me crazy but I like needles.

if it's anything like how they administer "Nuke" in Robocop2 or whatever, count me out. :rofl: :nutkick: :trout: :burger:
 
Ubiquitous said:
call me crazy but I like needles.

if it's anything like how they administer "Nuke" in Robocop2 or whatever, count me out. :rofl: :nutkick: :trout: :burger:

Not crazy, I feel the exact same and I know I am not crazy :think:
 
needles don't bother me until i hit a nerve, then i'm rather perturbed.

**** almost rhymes. write that down
 
from what ive heard from a friend of mine (take what you will from it) when he went through basic and they were administer shot a few people got these used on them. the problem was to administer them you needed to be specially trained and if not done right the patient could die. possible the aspiration part stated above could be the problem but this is just what i heard, mostly likely it wrong.
 
They probly have a slight kick because of the forces exerted. If you move it slightly it cuts instead of injects. I don't think anyone wants an intramuscular incision.
 
They probly have a slight kick because of the forces exerted. If you move it slightly it cuts instead of injects. I don't think anyone wants an intramuscular incision.

Those type devices have been around for years. They used the same reason given above (cuts & tears) to get people in our platoon to be still back when they used it on us in basic training. That was in 1985, so if they are still around you'd think the technology has been prooven.
 
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