Growth hormone secretagogue

CJC-1295 DAC Dosage Calculator

CJC-1295 with DAC (drug affinity complex) is a long-acting GHRH analog whose DAC modification extends its half-life compared with plain CJC-1295 (modified GRF 1-29). It is an investigational research compound and is not FDA-approved.

Enter the milligrams on your vial, the bacteriostatic water added, and your dose in micrograms. The calculator returns the exact draw volume and the mark on a U-100 insulin syringe (1 IU = 0.01 mL).

The CJC-1295 DAC dosage chart shows how commonly-referenced dose points translate to a draw at your vial size and water volume. Every figure is illustrative arithmetic, not a recommendation.

Concentration
1000 mcg/mL
Draw per dose
0.100 mL
On a U-100 syringe
10 IU
Doses per vial
20

Tip: adding 2 mL of bacteriostatic water would put this dose on a clean, easy-to-read mark on a U-100 insulin syringe.

Educational math only — not medical advice, and not a dose recommendation. The dose above is the value you entered. Always follow a licensed clinician’s instructions. Investigational compounds are not FDA-approved.

CJC-1295 DAC Dosage Chart

Commonly-cited dose points (commonly-cited research range) at a 2 mg vial reconstituted with 2 mL of bacteriostatic water. The volume and syringe columns are computed from those inputs — illustrative math, never a dose recommendation.

CJC-1295 DAC dosing chart at a 2 mg vial reconstituted with 2 mL of bacteriostatic water (1,000 mcg/mL). Example figures, not a recommendation.
Example doseVolume to drawU-100 syringeNotes
100 mcg0.100 mL10 IU
200 mcg0.200 mL20 IU
300 mcg0.300 mL30 IU

How to use this calculator

  1. Vial size — the milligrams printed on your CJC-1295 DAC vial (commonly 2 or 5 mg).
  2. Bacteriostatic water — how much you add to dissolve the powder. More water = a larger, easier-to-read draw at the same dose.
  3. Dose — the amount you intend to draw, in micrograms. This is your number, not a recommendation.
  4. Read the IU mark — on a U-100 insulin syringe, 1 IU = 0.01 mL. The calculator shows the exact tick to fill to.

CJC-1295 DAC FAQ

What is the difference between CJC-1295 with and without DAC?
The DAC (drug affinity complex) version binds to albumin, which extends its half-life; the no-DAC version (modified GRF 1-29) clears more quickly. The reconstitution math is identical — enter your vial size and dose to see the draw.
How many units is a 100 mcg CJC-1295 DAC dose?
It depends on concentration. A 2 mg vial reconstituted with 2 mL yields 1,000 mcg/mL, so a 100 mcg dose is 0.1 mL, which is 10 IU on a U-100 insulin syringe. Adjust the water volume to move to a different mark.
Is CJC-1295 DAC FDA-approved?
No. CJC-1295 DAC is an investigational research compound and is not FDA-approved. The information here is educational, not medical advice, and not a dose recommendation.
How is reconstituted CJC-1295 DAC stored?
Reconstituted peptide is generally refrigerated (about 2–8 °C) and protected from light; the dry powder is kept frozen. Follow the storage guidance for your specific product.

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Educational math only — not medical advice, and not a dose recommendation. PeptidePanel does not promote, source, or supply any compound. CJC-1295 DAC is an investigational research compound discussed for educational purposes and is not FDA-approved. Always consult a licensed clinician.