It's all one solid unit if you're talking about the kind I use. Not only does the rotary dial on the end have notches to prevent from being screwed in the opposite direction, but the plunger is inside the prefilled vial. I guess if you took a slin pin and removed all the insulin, injected whatever you wanted in there it could work, but you risk the change of not only causing contamination, but there will likely be residue left over from the insulin.
I guess it depends on how badly you need to conceal the identity of what you're actually pinning.
Not trying to hide anything, we knew this guy before that would randomly inject HGH with an Epi pen, would be kinda nice to have to take the edge off injecting by slamming into your arm.
Not trying to hide anything, we knew this guy before that would randomly inject HGH with an Epi pen, would be kinda nice to have to take the edge off injecting by slamming into your arm.
Ah. Epipens are a little different than insulin pens in that you still have to insert it delicately or you risk bending the pin. I do know some of the epinephrine pens did have replaceable vials, but they can be tricky to obtain. I'm a human pin-cushion now (insulin 5x a day, HCG 2x a week, test 2x a week) so I'm kind of used to the whole injecting thing.
I can say that subq injections tend to be easiest either in the inner thighs (if you have enough body fat) or above the hips. Anywhere near the belly button can be a little rough as there are quite a few nerves hiding there near the skin.
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