Sermorelin mg to ml conversion
Convert a milligram dose into the draw volume in millilitres, computed for the 5 mg vial reconstituted with 2 mL of bacteriostatic water — the standard reference presentation on the Sermorelin page.
Sermorelin mg to mL at 2.5 mg/mL
Vial: 5 mg · BAC water: 2 mL · Syringe: U-100
| Input | Equivalent |
|---|---|
| 0.1 mg | 0.04 mL |
| 0.2 mg | 0.08 mL |
| 0.3 mg | 0.12 mL |
| 0.5 mg | 0.2 mL |
The arithmetic, step by step
Every reconstitution conversion comes back to one number: the concentration of peptide per millilitre of solution. With 5 mg of Sermorelin dissolved in 2 mL of bacteriostatic water, the concentration is 5 ÷ 2 = 2.5 mg/mL. Once that figure is fixed, every other conversion follows from it.
A U-100 insulin syringe is graduated to 100 units per millilitre. That means one unit on the barrel corresponds to 1 ÷ 100 = 0.01 mL of solution, which carries 0.025 mg of Sermorelin. Multiplying through by the number of units drawn gives the dose in milligrams; dividing a target dose by that per-unit mass gives the units to draw. The lookup table above is just those two operations applied at common round-number inputs.
The micro-to-milli conversion sits one step above this layer. One milligram is 1,000 micrograms, so a 0.1 mg reference dose is the same as 100 mcg of Sermorelin. The mass does not change with the unit label — the calculator and the lookup table treat the two interchangeably.
These figures hold only at the listed vial-to-water ratio. Sermorelin is also shipped in vial sizes of 2 mg, 5 mg, 9 mg, 15 mg in research-vendor presentations, and changing the vial size — or the volume of BAC water used to reconstitute it — produces a different concentration and therefore a different lookup table. The calculator handles those overrides directly.
Concentration at other common vial sizes
Sermorelin ships in several vial sizes. At a fixed 2 mL of BAC water, the concentration scales linearly with the vial — and so does every value in the lookup table.
| Vial size | Concentration | 1 mg draws |
|---|---|---|
| 2 mg | 1 mg/mL | 100 units (1 mL) |
| 5 mg | 2.5 mg/mL | 40 units (0.4 mL) |
| 9 mg | 4.5 mg/mL | 22.22 units (0.222 mL) |
| 15 mg | 7.5 mg/mL | 13.33 units (0.133 mL) |
Other Sermorelin conversion references
Frequently asked questions
- How do you convert Sermorelin mg to mL?
- On a 5 mg vial reconstituted with 2 mL of bacteriostatic water, the concentration is 2.5 mg per mL. From there, the conversion is a single division (or multiplication) — see the lookup table above for the worked values.
- Does the conversion change with a different vial size?
- Yes. The same peptide reconstituted at a different vial-to-water ratio gives a different concentration, and every value in the lookup table shifts accordingly. Use the calculator linked on this page to override the defaults.
- What syringe should I assume?
- The lookup table on this page uses a U-100 insulin syringe (100 units per mL). On a U-40 syringe the units would scale proportionally — the underlying mass is the same.
- Why does the table only go up to certain values?
- The table is bounded by the vial's total peptide content and the BAC water volume in the vial. Values above those thresholds are not physically possible to draw from a single vial at the listed concentration.
- Is this conversion specific to Sermorelin?
- The arithmetic is general, but the input values (vial size, BAC water volume, default syringe) are Sermorelin-specific reference defaults drawn from the per-peptide reference page. Different peptides ship in different vial sizes, so the lookup table changes.
PeptideDose is an educational reference. It is not medical advice and does not replace consultation with a licensed healthcare provider. Doses shown in presets are derived from published protocols and product labels — they are not personal recommendations.
