Full Protocol Guide

Glutathione 1500mg

A wellness antioxidant entry for higher-strength glutathione review and safety screening.

Glutathione 1500mg product vial
Glutathione 1500mg vial Beauty, Wellness & Lifestyle
ProductGlutathione 1500mg
CategoryBeauty, Wellness & Lifestyle
FormatGlutathione 1500mg vial
ReviewSource-linked guide

Contents

Use this guide as a structured review page. The same headings appear for every protocol so clients and the care team can scan the page consistently.

Important Note

This page is informational and does not authorize use. Peptify clients should complete assessment, disclose medications and health history, and follow the clinician-approved plan only.

  • Do not start, stop, combine, or change a protocol based only on website content.
  • Emergency symptoms require urgent medical care, not a website or routine follow-up message.

Quickstart Highlights

Glutathione (GSH) is a naturally occurring tripeptide built from glutamate, cysteine, and glycine — the body’s main intracellular thiol antioxidant[1][5]. This educational page outlines a subcutaneous reconstitution and dosing approach for a 600 mg vial. Injectable glutathione is not FDA-approved for antioxidant, detox, or cosmetic/skin-lightening use, and there is no standardized or approved injectable dose — presented for research and educational use only.

  • Add 3.0 mL bacteriostatic water to one 600 mg vial → 200 mg/mL. On a U-100 syringe, 1 unit = 0.01 mL = 2 mg.
  • 100–200 mg subcutaneously, 2–3× weekly, across a 12-week course. There is no approved injectable dose; figures follow the source.
  • At 200 mg/mL, units = mg ÷ 2: 100 mg = 50 units (0.50 mL) and 200 mg = 100 units (1.0 mL) on a U-100 syringe.
  • Lyophilized: store at −20 °C (−4 °F); once reconstituted, refrigerate at 2–8 °C (35.6–46.4 °F) protected from light and do not freeze the solution.
  • Important: Start with the Prep & Injection Guide — it covers the preparation and safety basics every protocol on this site assumes.

Dosing & Reconstitution Guide

A single practical dilution with twice-to-thrice-weekly dosing, step by step

Standard Approach (3 mL = 200 mg/mL)
Phase / Week(s) Dose & Frequency Volume (U-100 units / mL)
Weeks 1–2 (initiation) 100 mg (2–3× weekly) 50 units (0.50 mL)
Weeks 3–8 (maintenance) 200 mg (2–3× weekly) 100 units (1.0 mL)
Weeks 9–12 200 mg (2–3× weekly) 100 units (1.0 mL)
Concentration 600 mg + 3.0 mL = 200 mg/mL 1 unit = 0.01 mL = 2 mg
  • Reconstitute: Add 3.0 mL bacteriostatic water to one 600 mg vial → final concentration 200 mg/mL.
  • Typical range: 100–200 mg per dose, 2–3× weekly, over a 12-week course.
  • Easy measuring: At 200 mg/mL, 1 unit = 0.01 mL = 2 mg on a U-100 syringe, so units = mg ÷ 2. A 200 mg dose equals 100 units (1.0 mL), a relatively large SC volume.
  • Storage: Lyophilized: store at −20 °C (−4 °F); after reconstitution, refrigerate at 2–8 °C (35.6–46.4 °F) protected from light and do not freeze the mixed solution.
  • Frequency: 2–3 subcutaneous injections per week, not daily. Verify each dose with units = mg ÷ 2 (e.g., 100 mg = 50 units, 200 mg = 100 units)[3][4]. There is no standardized or FDA-approved injectable dose; these figures reflect the source listing, not approved human dosing.

Reconstitution Steps

Draw 3.0 mL of bacteriostatic water into a sterile syringe.

  • Release it slowly down the vial’s inner wall to limit foaming.
  • Swirl or roll gently until fully dissolved — don’t shake.
  • Label with the date and concentration, then refrigerate at 2–8 °C (35.6–46.4 °F), shielded from light.
  • The 3.0 mL dilution gives a clean 200 mg/mL, so every dose reads as a whole number of units (units = mg ÷ 2). Note that a 200 mg dose is 1.0 mL — a relatively large subcutaneous volume. Avoid freezing the reconstituted solution and keep it 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

Quantities below assume a 12-week course of subcutaneous injections at 2–3 times per week.

  • At 200 mg per dose, 2–3 doses weekly, one 600 mg vial covers roughly 3 doses (about 1 week or a little more).
  • 8 weeks (2×/wk): ~6 vials
  • 12 weeks (2×/wk): ~8 vials
  • 12 weeks (3×/wk): ~12 vials
  • Per injection: 1 syringe
  • 12 weeks (2×/wk): ~24 syringes
  • 12 weeks (3×/wk): ~36 syringes
  • Use 3.0 mL per 600 mg vial for reconstitution.
  • 12 weeks (~8 vials): ~24 mL → 3 bottles
  • 12 weeks (~12 vials): ~36 mL → 4 bottles
  • One for the vial stopper + one for the injection site each session.
  • Per injection: 2 swabs
  • 12 weeks (2–3×/wk): ~48–72 swabs → 1 box

Protocol Overview

A concise summary of the twice-to-thrice-weekly regimen, drawn from the source listing.

  • ▪Goal: Supplement the body’s main intracellular antioxidant (GSH) — injectable use is not FDA-approved and proven antioxidant, detox, or skin-lightening benefits are not established[5][6].
  • ▪Schedule: Subcutaneous injections 2–3 times weekly across a 12-week course.
  • ▪Dose Range: 100 mg (weeks 1–2) then 200 mg (weeks 3–12) per dose; units = mg ÷ 2.
  • ▪Reconstitution: 3.0 mL bacteriostatic water per 600 mg vial gives 200 mg/mL (1 unit = 2 mg).
  • ▪Storage: Keep the dry vial frozen at −20 °C (−4 °F); once mixed, refrigerate at 2–8 °C protected from light and do not freeze the solution.

Dosing Protocol

A suggested approach based on the figures the source lists; there is no approved injectable dose.

  • ▪Start: Begin at 100 mg per dose (50 units, 0.50 mL) during weeks 1–2 to gauge tolerability.
  • ▪Titrate: Move to 200 mg per dose (100 units, 1.0 mL) from week 3 onward as tolerated.
  • ▪Target: Maintain 200 mg per dose, 2–3× weekly, through weeks 3–12.
  • ▪Cycle Length: Typically a 12-week course.
  • ▪Timing: Inject on consistent days each week and rotate injection sites systematically.

Storage Instructions

Correct storage is what preserves the peptide’s stability and activity.

  • ▪Lyophilized: Hold the dry vial at −20 °C (−4 °F) in dry, dark conditions and limit moisture exposure[7].
  • ▪Reconstituted: Refrigerate at 2–8 °C (35.6–46.4 °F) protected from light and use within about 28 days; do not freeze the mixed solution, as freezing can denature peptides[8].
  • ▪Handling: Let frozen vials warm to room temperature before opening so condensation won’t form, and keep the solution clear of heat and direct light.
  • ▪Freeze–thaw: Avoid repeated freeze–thaw cycles of the reconstituted solution.

Important Notes

Practical points that keep each injection session safe and consistent.

  • ▪Sterile technique: Use a fresh sterile U-100 insulin syringe each time and drop it straight into a puncture-proof sharps container afterward.
  • ▪Site rotation: Move between abdomen, thighs and upper arms to reduce local irritation and lipohypertrophy[9].
  • ▪Slow injection: Push the plunger slowly and pause a few seconds before withdrawing the needle to prevent backflow.
  • ▪Recordkeeping: Log each dose, injection site and any observations to keep the protocol consistent.
  • ▪Regulatory note: Injectable glutathione is not FDA-approved; the FDA issued a 2019 warning against compounded glutathione injectables over contamination and adverse-event risk, and IV glutathione for skin whitening is not approved by any route[10].

How This Works

Glutathione (GSH) is a tripeptide made of glutamate (glutamic acid), cysteine, and glycine[1][2]. The reactive thiol (−SH) group on its cysteine residue carries its antioxidant activity.

  • As the body’s main intracellular thiol antioxidant, glutathione neutralizes reactive oxygen species and participates in cellular detoxification pathways (for example as a cofactor for glutathione peroxidase and in conjugation reactions)[5][6].
  • Glutathione is widely studied in cell and laboratory work, but oral glutathione has poor bioavailability, and the value of injectable glutathione for raising tissue levels or producing clinical benefits is not well established[11][12].
  • Important caveat: claims that injectable glutathione provides proven skin-lightening, detox, or anti-aging benefits are not supported by adequate evidence. The FDA does not approve glutathione injectables for these uses, and the 2019 FDA warning flagged real safety concerns including contamination and allergic reactions. Such claims should be read as unproven.
  • Injectable glutathione is not an FDA-approved medicine for antioxidant, detox, or cosmetic use. It is presented here for research and educational purposes only.

Lifestyle Factors

Habits that support healthy oxidative balance alongside the protocol.

  • ▪Nutrition: A diet rich in fruits, vegetables, and sulfur-containing foods supports the body’s own glutathione synthesis.
  • ▪Activity & rest: Regular moderate exercise supports antioxidant defenses; balance it with adequate recovery.
  • ▪Sleep: Aim for 7–9 hours to support the body’s natural redox and repair processes.
  • ▪Stress: Manage stress and limit alcohol and smoking, which deplete glutathione and raise oxidative load.

Potential Benefits & Side Effects

What the literature discusses; clinical evidence for injectable glutathione is limited and individual results vary.

  • ▪Antioxidant role (established biochemistry): Glutathione is the body’s main intracellular antioxidant and neutralizes reactive oxygen species[5][6].
  • ▪Detox pathways (biochemistry): Glutathione participates in conjugation and detoxification reactions in the liver; whether injectable dosing meaningfully boosts this is not established[11].
  • ▪Skin-lightening claims (unproven): Marketed for skin whitening, but IV/injectable glutathione is not FDA-approved for this and evidence is weak.
  • ▪Note on humans: Clinical benefits of injectable glutathione are not established, and there is no approved injectable dose[13].
  • ▪Injection-site reactions: Mild redness, tenderness or soreness can occur; rotating sites helps. The 1.0 mL volume may sting.
  • ▪Allergic & contamination risk: The 2019 FDA warning cited allergic reactions and contamination from compounded glutathione injectables; caution is advised.
  • ▪Not FDA-approved: Injectable glutathione is not approved for antioxidant, detox, or cosmetic use, and long-term injectable safety data are limited.

Injection Technique

General subcutaneous technique, following established clinical best-practice guidance[14][15].

  • ▪Wash your hands well with soap and water.
  • ▪Wipe the vial stopper with an alcohol swab and let it air-dry.
  • ▪Choose a site (abdomen, thigh, or upper arm) and clean it with a fresh alcohol swab, letting it dry fully[15].
  • ▪Draw the intended dose, then check for air bubbles and push any out.
  • ▪Pinch a skinfold at the chosen site between thumb and forefinger.
  • ▪Insert the needle into the pinch at a 45–90-degree angle (use 45 degrees if the fat layer is thin)[14].
  • ▪Skip aspiration for subcutaneous shots — it isn’t needed[14].
  • ▪Press the plunger slowly and steadily until it’s fully down.
  • ▪Wait 5–10 seconds, then pull the needle straight out to prevent leakage.
  • ▪Drop the used syringe straight into a puncture-proof sharps container — never recap a needle.
  • ▪Return the reconstituted vial to the fridge right away.
  • ▪Rotate the injection site each session to prevent irritation and lipohypertrophy[9].
  • ▪Watch the site for excess redness, swelling, or signs of infection.

References

Reference-derived details for Glutathione 1500mg.

  • Glutathione (600mg Vial) Dosage Protocol Open source
  • 1 PubChem / NCBI Glutathione (GSH): structure of the tripeptide of glutamate, cysteine, and glycine, and its biological roles. View Source ↗ Open source
  • 2 Biochimica et Biophysica Acta (PubMed) Glutathione: synthesis from glutamate, cysteine and glycine, and its role in cellular redox homeostasis. View Source ↗ Open source
  • 3 U.S. Food & Drug Administration FDA alerts on compounded sterile drugs and unapproved injectables; injectable glutathione is not FDA-approved. View Source ↗ Open source
  • 4 FDA Consumer Warning (2019) FDA warning on compounded glutathione injectables over contamination and adverse-event risk; skin-whitening use not approved. View Source ↗ Open source
  • 5 Antioxidants (Basel) (PubMed) Glutathione as the principal intracellular thiol antioxidant in oxidative-stress defense. View Source ↗ Open source
  • 6 Free Radical Biology & Medicine (PubMed) Glutathione in detoxification and as a cofactor for glutathione peroxidase and conjugation reactions. View Source ↗ Open source
  • 7 Peptide Storage Guide Best practices for storing lyophilized peptides (temperature, humidity and light protection). View Source ↗ Open source
  • 8 Bacteriostatic Water Guidance Bacteriostatic water for injection: multi-dose vial stability and handling. View Source ↗ Open source
  • 9 NCBI Bookshelf Best practices for subcutaneous injection: aseptic technique and site rotation. View Source ↗ Open source
  • 10 FDA Drug Safety Communication IV/injectable glutathione for skin whitening is not approved by any route in the United States. View Source ↗ Open source
  • 11 Biochemical Pharmacology (PubMed) Glutathione in hepatic detoxification and conjugation; limited bioavailability of oral and injectable forms. View Source ↗ Open source
  • 12 European Journal of Nutrition (PubMed) Bioavailability of supplemental glutathione and effects on body stores. View Source ↗ Open source
  • 13 ClinicalTrials.gov Trial registry for glutathione; injectable glutathione has no approved indication for antioxidant, detox, or cosmetic use. View Source ↗ Open source
  • 14 Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) Subcutaneous injection technique: angle, site and no-aspiration guidance. View Source ↗ Open source
  • 15 Subcutaneous Injection Technique (Patient Education) How to administer a subcutaneous injection: clinical technique guidelines. View Source ↗ Open source
  • 16 Prime Lab Peptides Research-grade peptides supplier — purity specifications and certificates of analysis. View Source ↗ Open source