As a friend and I search the net, we find tons of articles on CWE (mostly for hydro/apap). The ones we have found for hydro/ibrupro seem to give the same answers as the ones with apap. Trying to put together the answer to the question by grabbing little pieces of many articles isn't working well, so we will ask to make sure he isnt missing something.
If a person had hydro/profen tablets....why would the process be any different for him if he prepared one for IV vs a Dilaudid. Obviously the scale is different, but He is not aiming to get a lot of hydro into the solution. Just enough from 1 tablet of HYprofen. He has read all the "Never iv pills" posts, and he understands that but just wants others to comment based off the particular way he gets the solution.
Consider that most of the common iv'd pills are drawn up through cotton. This particular person uses cotton, but takes the extra step pulling it through syringe that has a 4µm filter built in. If you have ever used one....you will never 'not' use one again. After that draw the needle is removed and the crystal clear fluid go into a different sterile place where it gets drawn, through cotton, into the actually one that gets used. The filter is clogged up so it has to have water pushed through the other way a few times then it works like new again.
Since ibuprofen is barely soluble in water, based on the method above, would it make since that the clear liquid you end up with is just water and <0.01mg of ibuprofen. He is not aiming for an IV rush. I'm wonders what others think (especially ones that usually think only the more potent should be IV'd)
He has not IV'd this and may never but still wants to understand why there is a difference in this case, if there is one. I am 2also curious how many users know about and use these rather large but invaluable needles with micron filters built in.
Never use a filter needle to actually deliver to your vein! Even if you find a small enough one and are top loading. It will clog before before push half a unit.
Thx for your time and knowledge
Edit: Sorry about the Swim thing. Going from forum to forum I always seem to get that wrong lol. Yes I meant CWE, I was just typing too fast and trying to hurry.
If a person had hydro/profen tablets....why would the process be any different for him if he prepared one for IV vs a Dilaudid. Obviously the scale is different, but He is not aiming to get a lot of hydro into the solution. Just enough from 1 tablet of HYprofen. He has read all the "Never iv pills" posts, and he understands that but just wants others to comment based off the particular way he gets the solution.
Consider that most of the common iv'd pills are drawn up through cotton. This particular person uses cotton, but takes the extra step pulling it through syringe that has a 4µm filter built in. If you have ever used one....you will never 'not' use one again. After that draw the needle is removed and the crystal clear fluid go into a different sterile place where it gets drawn, through cotton, into the actually one that gets used. The filter is clogged up so it has to have water pushed through the other way a few times then it works like new again.
Since ibuprofen is barely soluble in water, based on the method above, would it make since that the clear liquid you end up with is just water and <0.01mg of ibuprofen. He is not aiming for an IV rush. I'm wonders what others think (especially ones that usually think only the more potent should be IV'd)
He has not IV'd this and may never but still wants to understand why there is a difference in this case, if there is one. I am 2also curious how many users know about and use these rather large but invaluable needles with micron filters built in.
Never use a filter needle to actually deliver to your vein! Even if you find a small enough one and are top loading. It will clog before before push half a unit.
Thx for your time and knowledge
Edit: Sorry about the Swim thing. Going from forum to forum I always seem to get that wrong lol. Yes I meant CWE, I was just typing too fast and trying to hurry.
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