Hi everyone,
I've been doing a lot of reading on here and have found some really great information. I am waiting on some gear right now, but in the meantime I have another product that I want to put into a sterile vial for multiple uses.
From the research I've read I came up with a little procedure:
Supplies
-Wattman wheel filters 0.22ug
-Benzyl Alcohol
-Distilled Water
- pressure cooker
-gloves/mask/hairnet
- still air box
- Sterile Vials 10ml
Procedure:
- First make bacteriostatic water, by pressure cooking distilled water at 15psi for 25 minutes. Allowing to cool, and place in the still air box
- Once cooled add in Bezyl Alcohol at 1% by volume in still air box wearing gloves and mask
- Draw out bacteriostatic water into sterile 10cc syringe, and mix in to jar with product already in. Mix and let disolve
- Take a new sterile syringe and attach wheel filter, draw up product+bacteriostatic water through Wattman wheel filter
- Alcohol swab the sterile vial, inject sterile solution into the sterile vial
My ideas on this, was the distilled water is sterilized by the pressure cooker; acting as an autoclave. Benzyl Alcohol added at 1% by volume to ward off bacteria from growing in the water/vial. Ran solution through Wattman to get out any particles and some bacteria.
From what I've gathered, I maybe creating an extra step using the pressure cooker but it makes me feel better. I have some questions though:
- Will this method work for preserving a water soluble salt that is capable of 20G/100ML solubility? Does it matter what the salt/molecule is?
- How long will the solution be sterile (Assuming I use aseptic conditions)?
- Does it matter what the product is? I assumed if 2%BA worked okay for steroids it would work okay for this, I don't know if oil is less prone to bacteria than sterile water alone, but I figure if a Wattman is used and it's being put into a sterile vial it should be okay.
For the sake of harm reduction can someone tell me if my logic is correct on this.
Thanks!
I've been doing a lot of reading on here and have found some really great information. I am waiting on some gear right now, but in the meantime I have another product that I want to put into a sterile vial for multiple uses.
From the research I've read I came up with a little procedure:
Supplies
-Wattman wheel filters 0.22ug
-Benzyl Alcohol
-Distilled Water
- pressure cooker
-gloves/mask/hairnet
- still air box
- Sterile Vials 10ml
Procedure:
- First make bacteriostatic water, by pressure cooking distilled water at 15psi for 25 minutes. Allowing to cool, and place in the still air box
- Once cooled add in Bezyl Alcohol at 1% by volume in still air box wearing gloves and mask
- Draw out bacteriostatic water into sterile 10cc syringe, and mix in to jar with product already in. Mix and let disolve
- Take a new sterile syringe and attach wheel filter, draw up product+bacteriostatic water through Wattman wheel filter
- Alcohol swab the sterile vial, inject sterile solution into the sterile vial
My ideas on this, was the distilled water is sterilized by the pressure cooker; acting as an autoclave. Benzyl Alcohol added at 1% by volume to ward off bacteria from growing in the water/vial. Ran solution through Wattman to get out any particles and some bacteria.
From what I've gathered, I maybe creating an extra step using the pressure cooker but it makes me feel better. I have some questions though:
- Will this method work for preserving a water soluble salt that is capable of 20G/100ML solubility? Does it matter what the salt/molecule is?
- How long will the solution be sterile (Assuming I use aseptic conditions)?
- Does it matter what the product is? I assumed if 2%BA worked okay for steroids it would work okay for this, I don't know if oil is less prone to bacteria than sterile water alone, but I figure if a Wattman is used and it's being put into a sterile vial it should be okay.
For the sake of harm reduction can someone tell me if my logic is correct on this.
Thanks!