Rule number one – know what you’re injecting. The question was how to inject steroids, not “how to inject whatever else you think might work”, right?
Steroids – specifically, anabolic steroids – are synthetic compounds that mimic the effects of your natural sex hormone, Testosterone, and promote muscle growth. Along with bigger muscles, you can get:
Some anabolic steroids are oral, and you – we hope – don’t need a guide on how to take a pill. Even though oral compounds are effective and popular, all of them should never be taken alone. An oral-only cycle (in the exception of, maybe, Anavar in small doses) can lead to Testosterone suppression with a complete list of nasty effects:
That’s why you need to learn how to inject steroids: you either do it or get the crazy side effects from cycling oral compounds solo. Or, you know, work out naturally. That’s always away, even though a relatively slow one.
Other reasons to learn are simple: if you don’t know how to inject steroids and still try to do it intuitively… you’re going to have a bad time. Here are some terrible case scenarios:
It’s hard to stress it more: learning how to inject steroids is essential. You either learn or don’t even touch a syringe.
Finally, to practice. Intramuscular injections of anabolic steroids are not different from intramuscular injections of any other substance. The majority of anabolic compounds on the market require an intramuscular injection, so it’s over half of the success.
First – you need an injection site. Anecdotally, glutes have the best risk-to-effectiveness balance:
Now that you’ve found a place – get all the stuff you need:
Open the vial, get the right amount of the substance in it, make sure there are no bubbles, and stick it under a 90-degree angle right into the injection site. Push the lever slowly until all the substance is in the muscle, take the needle out and disinfect the place.
How To Inject Steroids In The Fat Tissu
So-called subcutaneous injections are a good alternative to intramuscular ones. In this case, the target is not your muscle tissue but a thin fat layer between your skin and muscles. It’s perfect for “lighter” solutions, like SARMs or peptides, but sometimes works well with TRT or usual AAS cycles as well.
The good news is – you don’t need to read a whole new guide on how to inject steroids subcutaneously. There are just three changes:
In every other aspect, subcutaneous injections are not that different from intramuscular.