Ovagen (20mg Vial) Dosage Protocol

Ovagen (20 mg Vial) Dosage Protocol

Quickstart Highlights

Ovagen is a synthetic ultrashort tripeptide (Glu-Asp-Leu; EDL) studied as a bioregulator of gastrointestinal and liver tissues[1]. In vitro studies demonstrate that EDL increases cell proliferation and modulates aging-related gene markers (p16, p21, p53, SIRT-6) in renal cell cultures[2]. No controlled human trials exist; available data are preclinical and cell-based. This educational protocol presents a once-daily subcutaneous approach with gradual titration using microgram-level dosing.

  • Reconstitute: Add 2.0 mL bacteriostatic water → 10 mg/mL (10,000 μg/mL) concentration.
  • Typical daily range: 10–150 μg once daily (gradual titration over 16 weeks).
  • Easy measuring: At 10 mg/mL, 1 unit = 0.01 mL = 100 μg on a U-100 insulin syringe.
  • Storage: Lyophilized: freeze at −20 °C (−4 °F); after reconstitution, refrigerate at 2–8 °C (35.6–46.4 °F); avoid freeze–thaw cycles.
Ovagen Vial

Dosing & Reconstitution Guide

Educational guide for reconstitution and daily dosing

Standard / Gradual Approach (2 mL = 10 mg/mL)

Week Daily Dose (μg) Units (per injection) (mL)
Weeks 1–2 10 μg (0.01 mg) 0.1 units (0.001 mL)
Weeks 3–4 20 μg (0.02 mg) 0.2 units (0.002 mL)
Weeks 5–6 50 μg (0.05 mg) 0.5 units (0.005 mL)
Weeks 7–8 100 μg (0.1 mg) 1 unit (0.01 mL)
Weeks 9–16 100–150 μg (0.1–0.15 mg) 1–1.5 units (0.01–0.015 mL)

Frequency: Inject once daily subcutaneously. Because all per-administration volumes are ≤1.5 units (≤0.015 mL), use 30-unit or 50-unit insulin syringes for improved readability and accuracy. Titrate slowly by adding 10–20 μg (0.1–0.2 units) every 1–2 weeks as tolerated[3].

Reconstitution Steps

  1. Draw 2.0 mL bacteriostatic water with a sterile syringe.
  2. Inject slowly down the vial wall; avoid foaming.
  3. Gently swirl/roll until dissolved (do not shake).
  4. Label and refrigerate at 2–8 °C (35.6–46.4 °F), protected from light.

Important: This guide is for educational purposes only and is not medical advice. For research use only. Not for human consumption.

Supplies Needed

Plan based on a 16-week daily protocol with gradual titration. One 20 mg vial provides approximately 13,510 μg total usage over 16 weeks, so a single vial is sufficient for the full course.

  • Peptide Vials (Ovagen, 20 mg each):

    • 16 weeks: 1 vial (with excess remaining)
  • Insulin Syringes (U-100, 30-unit or 50-unit recommended):

    • Per week: 7 syringes (1/day)
    • 16 weeks: 112 syringes (recommend ~120 with extras)
  • Bacteriostatic Water (10 mL bottles): Use 2.0 mL per vial for reconstitution.

    • 16 weeks (1 vial): 2 mL1 × 10 mL bottle
  • Alcohol Swabs: One for the vial stopper + one for the injection site each day.

    • Per week: 14 swabs (2/day)
    • 16 weeks: 224 swabs → recommend 3 × 100-count boxes

Protocol Overview

Concise summary of the once-daily regimen.

  • Goal: Support gastrointestinal and hepatic tissue bioregulation over time[1].
  • Schedule: Daily subcutaneous injections for 16 weeks with gradual titration.
  • Dose Range: 10–150 μg daily with slow escalation.
  • Reconstitution: 2.0 mL per 20 mg vial (10 mg/mL) for precise microgram measurements.
  • Storage: Lyophilized frozen; reconstituted refrigerated; avoid repeated freeze–thaw.

Dosing Protocol

Suggested daily titration approach.

  • Start: 10 μg daily for Weeks 1–2; increase to 20 μg for Weeks 3–4.
  • Escalate: 50 μg for Weeks 5–6; then 100 μg for Weeks 7–8.
  • Maintenance: 100–150 μg daily for Weeks 9–16.
  • Frequency: Once per day (subcutaneous).
  • Timing: Any consistent time; rotate injection sites.

Storage Instructions

Proper storage preserves peptide quality[4][5].

  • Lyophilized: Store at −20 °C (−4 °F) or colder in dry, dark conditions; for long-term stability, −80 °C (−112 °F) is optimal.
  • Reconstituted: Refrigerate at 2–8 °C (35.6–46.4 °F); use within a few days or aliquot and freeze to minimize hydrolysis.
  • Do not store thawed solution longer than 1–2 days at 2–8 °C; avoid freeze–thaw cycles.
  • Allow vials to reach room temperature before opening to reduce condensation uptake.

Important Notes

Practical considerations for consistency and safety.

  • Use new sterile insulin syringes (30-unit or 50-unit preferred for low-volume accuracy); dispose in a sharps container.
  • Rotate injection sites (abdomen, thighs, upper arms) to reduce local irritation.
  • Inject slowly; wait a few seconds before withdrawing the needle.
  • Document daily dose and site rotation to maintain consistency.
  • Label the vial with date/time of reconstitution, diluent volume, final concentration, and initials[4].

How This Works

Ovagen (EDL) is an ultrashort peptide believed to enter cells and bind DNA, thereby modulating gene expression and protein synthesis[1][6]. In vitro studies show EDL increases cell proliferation and alters aging-related gene markers (p16, p21, p53, SIRT-6) in renal cell cultures, suggesting cytoprotective effects[2]. Such ultrashort peptides are known to influence cell differentiation, proliferation, and apoptosis via gene regulation[3]. Additionally, EDL has been identified as an HIV-1 protease inhibitor with binding affinity in the enzyme active site[7].

Potential Benefits & Side Effects

Observations from preclinical and in vitro literature (no controlled human trials available).

  • May support gastrointestinal and hepatic tissue bioregulation based on ultrashort peptide bioregulator research[1].
  • In vitro studies indicate potential cytoprotective effects via modulation of aging-related gene expression[2].
  • Ultrashort peptides generally exhibit rapid metabolism and low immunogenicity[6].
  • Side effects are not well characterized due to lack of human clinical data; mild injection-site reactions (redness/itch) may occur with subcutaneous administration.

Lifestyle Factors

Complementary strategies for best outcomes.

  • Pair with a balanced diet supporting gastrointestinal and liver health.
  • Maintain regular physical activity to support overall metabolic function.
  • Prioritize sleep and stress management to support adherence and recovery.
  • Avoid excessive alcohol and hepatotoxic substances during the protocol.

Injection Technique

General subcutaneous guidance from clinical best-practice resources[8].

  • Clean the vial stopper and skin with 60–70% alcohol; allow to dry[8].
  • Pinch a skinfold; insert the needle at 45–90° into subcutaneous tissue[9][10].
  • Do not aspirate for subcutaneous injections; inject slowly and steadily[8].
  • Rotate sites systematically (abdomen, thighs, upper arms) to avoid tissue irritation; keep at least ~2 cm between injections on the same area.
  • Use a 23–25 gauge needle (5/8″ length) or standard insulin syringe needles (28–31G)[10].

Important Note

This content is intended for therapeutic educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment.

References


  • MDPI International Journal of Molecular Sciences
    — Transport of biologically active ultrashort peptides using POT and LAT carriers

  • PubMed — Advances in Gerontology
    — Tripeptides slow down aging process in renal cell culture (Khavinson et al., 2014)

  • Nature — Signal Transduction and Targeted Therapy
    — Therapeutic peptides: current applications and future directions (Li et al., 2022)

  • Sigma-Aldrich
    — Peptide Handling and Storage Guide (aliquoting, freeze–thaw, labeling)

  • Bachem
    — Handling and Storage Guidelines for Peptides (temperature, stability)

  • PubMed — Biochemistry
    — HIV-1 protease inhibitors: enthalpic versus entropic optimization of binding affinity

  • PubMed — Biochemistry
    — HIV-1 protease inhibitors Glu-Asp-Leu and Glu-Asp-Phe: thermodynamic studies (Velazquez-Campoy & Freire, 2000)

  • NCBI Bookshelf — WHO
    — Best practices for injections and related procedures (asepsis, preparation, administration)

  • CDC
    — Vaccine administration: subcutaneous route (angle/site guidance)

  • CDC (Subcut Injection PDF)
    — Technique diagram and site guidance for subcutaneous injections

  • Pure Lab Peptides
    — Ovagen (20 mg) product page (quality and batch documentation)