DSIP
How to reconstitute the 5 mg vial and convert any target dose into insulin units. Reconstitution math and unit conversions for the 5 mg vial. DSIP has very limited human data and no validated dose; the usage pattern shown is community-reported and anecdotal.

No validated human dose. DSIP is a research-use peptide with no FDA-approved dose. The reconstitution math below is exact measurement — a calculator, not advice. Any usage figures are community-reported and clearly labeled, and none of this is medical advice.
Calculate for your vial
Enter the mg on your DSIP vial, the bacteriostatic water you added, and your target dose — it works out the exact units to draw on a U-100 insulin syringe, for whatever you personally have.
Reconstitution Calculator
Check the decimal. A misplaced decimal point here is a 10× dosing error. Re-read every number, and confirm your dose with a licensed clinician before you draw.
Educational only — not a dosing recommendation. This tool does the measurement math; it does not tell you what to take. On a U-100 insulin syringe, 100 units = 1 mL.
1 · Find your dose
Pick what you're using DSIP for and how much bacteriostatic water you added — this pulls out the exact units to draw and how often people report using it.
to draw 100 mcg–250 mcg at 2 mL water
2.5 mg/mL · 25 mcg per unit
- How often
- Once daily before bed
- Cycle
- Used as needed (community)
2 · Reconstitute it cleanly, step by step
How to turn the 5 mg powder into a measured liquid with clean, sterile technique. More water means each insulin unit holds less peptide — easier to measure small amounts accurately.
1Swab the stoppers
Wipe the rubber top of each vial with an alcohol pad and let it air-dry.
2Draw the water
Pull your bacteriostatic water up into the insulin syringe.
3Reconstitute
Inject it slowly down the inside wall of the peptide vial — never straight onto the powder.
4Swirl to dissolve
Gently swirl until the powder fully dissolves into a clear liquid. Never shake.
5Equalize, then draw
To draw a dose: push in an equal amount of air first to equalize the pressure, then pull your dose.
- 1
Swab both tops
Wipe the rubber top of the bacteriostatic-water vial and the DSIP vial stopper with a fresh alcohol pad, and let them air-dry. Never touch the needle or the stoppers after wiping.
Alcohol swab · let dry - 2
Draw the water
First pull 2 mL of air into the syringe and inject it into the bacteriostatic-water vial to equalize the pressure, then draw your 2 mL of water back out. Inject it into the DSIP vial down the inside glass wall, not onto the powder.
2 mL BAC water - 3
Swirl, don't shake
Gently swirl the 5 mg vial until the powder fully dissolves into a clear liquid. Never shake — shaking can damage the peptide and foam the solution.
Swirl, don't shake - 4
Know your strength
The vial is now 2.5 mg/mL. Each unit on a U-100 syringe holds about 25 mcg.
2.5 mg/mL - 5
Re-swab & draw your dose
Wipe the stopper again. With a fresh insulin syringe, pull back 10 units of air and inject it into the vial to equalize the pressure, then draw 10 units (0.1 mL) for a 250 mcg dose.
10 units - 6
Store it right
Keep the mixed vial in the fridge, away from light. Use a new sterile syringe every time, never share, and drop used sharps in a proper container.
Refrigerate · fresh needle
What each water volume gives you:
3 · Full units reference
Every bacteriostatic-water volume (rows) against every target dose (columns) — each cell is the U-100 units and the exact draw in mL. The highlighted row is the easiest volume to measure.
| BAC water | Concentration | Per unit | 100 mcg | 250 mcg | 500 mcg |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 mL | 5 mg/mL | 50 mcg | 2u0.02 mL | 5u0.05 mL | 10u0.1 mL |
| 2 mLeasy pick | 2.5 mg/mL | 25 mcg | 4u0.04 mL | 10u0.1 mL | 20u0.2 mL |
| 3 mL | 1.67 mg/mL | 16.67 mcg | 6u0.06 mL | 15u0.15 mL | 30u0.3 mL |
4 · Everyday usage
DSIP is a research peptide with very limited modern human data and no validated dose. The pattern below is community-reported, usually described before sleep.
Sleep support (community, SC)
Community-reported · anecdotalA small per-injection amount people commonly report in the evening before bed.
- Reported amount
- 100 mcg–250 mcg≈ 4–10 units @ 2 mL
- Frequency
- Once daily before bed
- Cycle
- Used as needed (community)
Community-reported and anecdotal (~100–250 mcg per subcutaneous injection in the evening). DSIP has very limited modern human data, is not FDA-approved, has no validated dose, and this is not a recommendation.
Frequently asked questions
How many insulin units is 100 mcg of DSIP from a 5 mg vial?
- Reconstituting a 5 mg vial with 2 mL of bacteriostatic water gives 2.5 mg/mL — about 25 mcg per unit. Drawing 100 mcg is 0.04 mL, or 4 units on a U-100 insulin syringe. This is measurement math, not a dose recommendation.
How many insulin units is 250 mcg of DSIP from a 5 mg vial?
- Reconstituting a 5 mg vial with 2 mL of bacteriostatic water gives 2.5 mg/mL — about 25 mcg per unit. Drawing 250 mcg is 0.1 mL, or 10 units on a U-100 insulin syringe. This is measurement math, not a dose recommendation.
Is there an established dose of DSIP?
- No. DSIP (Delta Sleep-Inducing Peptide) has only very limited human data, no FDA approval, and no validated dose. The figures here are community-reported and anecdotal. Dosing decisions belong with a licensed clinician.
WikiPeps is a community reference. Reconstitution figures are deterministic measurement math; usage figures are sourced and labeled. Nothing here is medical advice, a recommendation, or an offer to sell peptides — dosing decisions belong with a licensed clinician.
