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Auto-generated transcript of @erin.e.arnold's video. Quoted here for educational fact-check commentary; original creator retains all rights to the video content.
- 0:00So if I'm planning to do 5 mg per week of tricep attack, I should get a 20 mg
- 0:06violin and add how much back. So for me and I got a 20 mg violin, I would add 2 ml
- 0:11or 200 units of backwater to the violin. And if your dose is a 5 mg per week,
- 0:19I would you would be able to pull 50 units per shot. So that violin that you have
- 0:24should give you four doses altogether. So again, if you add 200 units of
- 0:30backwater, you would pull 50 units for a 5 mg dose and that violin should give you
- 0:37four doses. Hope that helps.
GLP-1 side effects and tips: what TikTok gets right and wrong
Quick answer
The video describes reconstitution of a compounded tirzepatide vial using bacteriostatic water and an insulin syringe, targeting a 5 mg weekly self-administered dose. The arithmetic is consistent with a 10 mg/mL concentration using a U-100 insulin syringe, but the content omits prescriber involvement, syringe-type clarification, and any reference to the FDA-approved titration schedule, which begins at 2.5 mg weekly. Compounded tirzepatide is not FDA-approved and its potency cannot be assumed equivalent to branded Mounjaro or Zepbound.
Video review standard
Clinical fact-check snapshot
FormBlends treats social health videos as a starting point, then checks the claim against medical context, source quality, safety limits, and whether licensed provider review belongs in the next step.
Evidence signal
Source-backed review
Regulatory reality
Access rules depend on the compound and patient situation
Safety screen
Viral claims can miss contraindications, dose escalation, medication interactions, and quality-control risks.
This page currently connects to 8 source-backed evidence items through visible references or structured citation data.
PubMed evidence trail
Research sources used to frame this page
For GLP-1 side effects and tips: what TikTok gets right and wrong, FormBlends checks the page topic against primary trials, systematic reviews, guidelines, and current PubMed-indexed literature where available. These citations are context, not medical advice, proof of eligibility, or a claim that every study applies to every patient.
Tirzepatide Once Weekly for the Treatment of Obesity
Primary SURMOUNT-1 trial source for tirzepatide weight-loss ranges and tolerability.
PubMed
Continued Treatment With Tirzepatide for Maintenance of Weight Reduction
Used for continuation, stopping, and maintenance questions after initial weight loss.
PubMed
Efficacy of GLP-1 Receptor Agonists on Weight Loss, BMI, and Waist Circumference
A broad meta-analysis anchor for GLP-1 weight-loss effect and class-level comparisons.
PubMed
Discontinuing glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonists and body habitus
Used for pages discussing stopping therapy, weight regain, and long-term planning.
PubMed
Video claim decision path
Turn the claim into a safer next question
Direct answer
GLP-1 side effects and tips: what TikTok gets right and wrong should be treated as a claim to verify, then compared with evidence, safety context, and a provider review path.
Evidence check
Social clips are useful prompts, but they rarely show the full evidence base, contraindications, or dosing context.
Safety check
A viral claim can miss patient-specific risks, medication interactions, legal access, and source quality.
Next step
If the claim matches your goal, use the get-started flow to move from curiosity into a supervised prescription review.
Helpful context before the funnel
Page-specific review note
What this exact clip is really saying
This FormBlends review is specific to "GLP-1 side effects and tips: what TikTok gets right and wrong" from Erin | Pretty Little Reveals ✨. We read the clip as a GLP-1 social video fact-checks claim about GLP-1 social video fact-checks, then separate the useful signal from what a short social video cannot prove. The page-specific claim focus is: The video describes reconstitution of a compounded tirzepatide vial using bacteriostatic water and an insulin syringe, targeting a 5 mg weekly self-administered dose.
The reason this review is not generic is the source wording and the canonical claim label "glp1 replying to siaani." In this clip, the useful excerpt is: "So if I'm planning to do 5 mg per week of tricep attack, I should get a 20 mg violin and add how much back." That wording changes the review because it points to GLP-1 social video fact-checks evidence, safety, and patient-fit context, not a one-size-fits-all protocol.
The source trail for this page is checked against Tirzepatide Once Weekly for the Treatment of Obesity (2022), Continued Treatment With Tirzepatide for Maintenance of Weight Reduction (2024), and Tirzepatide for Obesity Treatment and Diabetes Prevention (2025), plus the creator's own wording. GLP-1 social video fact-checks decisions still need an eligibility review, medication-interaction screen, access check, and quality-control review before anyone treats a social clip as medical advice.
Claim verdict
The useful answer behind this video
This page is built to answer the specific claim behind the clip, then separate what is useful from what still needs clinical context. That makes the URL more than a repost: it gives Google, readers, and AI retrieval systems a concise verdict with source and safety boundaries.
Claim being checked
The video describes reconstitution of a compounded tirzepatide vial using bacteriostatic water and an insulin syringe, targeting a 5 mg weekly self-administered dose.
FormBlends verdict
GLP-1 social video fact-checks evidence, safety, and patient-fit context
Evidence strength
Source-backed review with clinical or regulatory citations.
Patient-safe next step
Compare the claim with FormBlends safety guidance and a licensed-provider review before acting.
What to do with this video
Use the clip as a claim to verify, not a treatment plan
What it helps with
- The video describes reconstitution of a compounded tirzepatide vial using bacteriostatic water and an insulin syringe, targeting a 5 mg weekly self-administered dose. The arithmetic is consistent with a 10 mg/mL concentration using a U-100 insulin syringe, but the content omits prescriber involvement, syringe-type clarification, and any reference to the FDA-approved titration schedule, which begins at 2.5 mg weekly. Compounded tirzepatide is not FDA-approved and its potency cannot be assumed equivalent to branded Mounjaro or Zepbound.
- The reconstitution math in this video is internally correct for a U-100 insulin syringe, but it only works if the vial contains exactly the labeled amount of tirzepatide, which is not guaranteed in compounded products (Gudeman et al., 2013, Drug Safety).
- The FDA-approved tirzepatide titration schedule starts at 2.5 mg weekly for four weeks before escalating. Starting at 5 mg, as this video implies, is not standard and increases the likelihood of nausea, vomiting, and other GI side effects (Jastreboff et al., 2022, NEJM).
What it may miss
- It may not cover eligibility, contraindications, medication interactions, lab history, or dose escalation.
- Compound access, legal status, and product quality still need a separate safety check.
- Social video captions rarely show the full evidence base behind a claim.
Best next step
Compare the claim against a FormBlends guide, safety page, and licensed-provider review before acting.
Start provider reviewWhat You'll Learn
- The reconstitution math in this video is internally correct for a U-100 insulin syringe, but it only works if the vial contains exactly the labeled amount of tirzepatide, which is not guaranteed in compounded products (Gudeman et al., 2013, Drug Safety).
- The FDA-approved tirzepatide titration schedule starts at 2.5 mg weekly for four weeks before escalating. Starting at 5 mg, as this video implies, is not standard and increases the likelihood of nausea, vomiting, and other GI side effects (Jastreboff et al., 2022, NEJM).
- Using the word 'units' without specifying U-100 insulin syringe is a real source of error. A U-40 syringe user following this video would inject a different volume and get a different dose than intended.
- Compounded tirzepatide is not FDA-approved and is not equivalent to Mounjaro or Zepbound. The FDA removed tirzepatide from its drug shortage list in 2025, which affects the legal status of compounding pharmacies producing it.
- No reconstitution guidance from a social media video replaces instructions from a licensed prescriber or dispensing pharmacist who knows your dose, your syringe type, and your specific compounded product.
- Bacteriostatic water is the correct diluent for multi-dose compounded peptide vials. Using sterile water instead reduces shelf life and increases contamination risk, a distinction the video does not address.
- The FDA issued warnings in 2024 about compounded GLP-1 products containing incorrect doses or unapproved salt forms of the active ingredient, which further undermines the assumption that vial labeling can be taken at face value.
Our take · Written by FormBlends editorial team · Reviewed by FormBlends Medical Team · This is not a transcript. It is our independent review of the video above.
What did @erin.e.arnold actually say?
The creator walked through a specific reconstitution calculation for what she called "tricep attack" (clearly tirzepatide) at a 5 mg weekly dose. She said to take a "20 mg violin" (vial), add "2 ml or 200 units of backwater" (bacteriostatic water), then pull "50 units per shot" to hit a 5 mg dose. Her conclusion: one vial gives you four doses.
That's the whole video. No disclaimers, no mention of a prescribing provider, no acknowledgment that this is a compounded peptide rather than an FDA-approved branded product. Just math, delivered casually, to 34,000 viewers who are presumably trying to inject themselves with a compounded GLP-1 at home.
The math itself is worth examining carefully. So is the context around it, which is where things get genuinely problematic.
Does the science back this up?
The reconstitution math is internally consistent, but the framing erases critical variables that make it unreliable for real-world use.
Tirzepatide, the active ingredient in FDA-approved Mounjaro and Zepbound, is a dual GIP/GLP-1 receptor agonist. The branded injectable comes in pre-filled, pre-dosed pens. Compounded tirzepatide, which is what this video describes, is a lyophilized powder or liquid that requires reconstitution before injection. The FDA has repeatedly warned that compounded versions are not the same as FDA-approved drugs and have not been evaluated for safety, efficacy, or sterility (FDA Drug Safety Communication, 2024).
Here is where the math gets slippery. Adding 2 mL of bacteriostatic water to a 20 mg vial gives you a concentration of 10 mg/mL. If you pull 50 units on a U-100 insulin syringe, you are pulling 0.5 mL, which at 10 mg/mL equals 5 mg. The arithmetic works. But "units" on an insulin syringe is not a standardized measure for peptides. It is a volume proxy specific to U-100 insulin syringes, and using that language without explanation creates real room for dosing error if someone uses a different syringe type.
What did they get wrong (or right)?
The math is right, assuming a U-100 syringe and exact vial labeling. Credit where it is due.
But several things are wrong or missing. First, the language is dangerously sloppy. "Units" means something specific in pharmacology and something different when used as a volume shortcut for insulin syringes. A viewer with a U-40 syringe or a 0.5 mL syringe with different gradations would miscalculate their dose using this guidance.
Second, there is no mention that compounded tirzepatide concentration can vary by pharmacy. A vial labeled "20 mg" from a 503A compounding pharmacy may not contain exactly 20 mg. Potency verification is not guaranteed the way it is with branded drugs (Gudeman et al., 2013, Drug Safety).
Third, and most seriously, this video presents a specific dose, "5 mg per week," as a default starting point without any clinical framing. The FDA-approved tirzepatide titration schedule for Zepbound starts at 2.5 mg weekly for four weeks before escalating. Starting at 5 mg increases the likelihood of gastrointestinal adverse events (Jastreboff et al., 2022, New England Journal of Medicine).
Telling 34,000 viewers to pull 50 units and start at 5 mg, with no provider in the frame, is not just incomplete. It is the kind of content that leads to preventable harms.
What should you actually know?
Reconstitution math for compounded peptides is not inherently dangerous to discuss, but it requires precision and clinical context that this video skips entirely.
If you are using a compounded GLP-1 under the care of a licensed provider, your provider or pharmacist should be walking you through reconstitution, not TikTok. The calculation the creator describes, dividing total mg by volume to get concentration and then calculating volume per dose, is real pharmacokinetic arithmetic. But the inputs have to be verified: confirmed vial potency, correct syringe type, and a dose that has been prescribed by someone who knows your medical history.
The FDA placed compounded semaglutide and tirzepatide on its shortage list for a period, which created legal pathways for compounding pharmacies to produce them. That window has been closing. In 2025, the FDA removed tirzepatide from its shortage list, which has significant implications for the legal status of compounded versions going forward.
No online video, regardless of how accurate the math is, replaces a prescribing relationship. If a telehealth platform is involved, your provider should be available to answer exactly the questions this video is trying to answer.
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About the Creator
Erin | Pretty Little Reveals ✨ · TikTok creator
34.6K views on this video
Replying to @Siaani 🫧 🫶🏻
Frequently asked questions
Quick answers based on this video and our medical team review.
What does the video say about the reconstitution math in this video?
The reconstitution math in this video is internally correct for a U-100 insulin syringe, but it only works if the vial contains exactly the labeled amount of tirzepatide, which is not guaranteed in compounded products (Gudeman et al., 2013, Drug Safety).
What does the video say about the fda-approved tirzepatide titration schedule starts at 2.5 mg weekly?
The FDA-approved tirzepatide titration schedule starts at 2.5 mg weekly for four weeks before escalating. Starting at 5 mg, as this video implies, is not standard and increases the likelihood of nausea, vomiting, and other GI side effects (Jastreboff et al., 2022, NEJM).
What does the video say about using the word 'units' without specifying u-100 insulin syringe?
Using the word 'units' without specifying U-100 insulin syringe is a real source of error. A U-40 syringe user following this video would inject a different volume and get a different dose than intended.
What does the video say about compounded tirzepatide?
Compounded tirzepatide is not FDA-approved and is not equivalent to Mounjaro or Zepbound. The FDA removed tirzepatide from its drug shortage list in 2025, which affects the legal status of compounding pharmacies producing it.
What does the video say about no reconstitution guidance from a social media video replaces instructions?
No reconstitution guidance from a social media video replaces instructions from a licensed prescriber or dispensing pharmacist who knows your dose, your syringe type, and your specific compounded product.
What does the video say about bacteriostatic water?
Bacteriostatic water is the correct diluent for multi-dose compounded peptide vials. Using sterile water instead reduces shelf life and increases contamination risk, a distinction the video does not address.
Sources & references
Citations extracted from our medical team's review. Click any citation to search PubMed.
Read More on This Topic
Our written guides go deeper with dosing details, comparison tables, and medical-team reviewed protocols.
Not medical advice. This video was made by Erin | Pretty Little Reveals ✨, not by FormBlends. Our write-up above is an editorial review, not a medical recommendation. Talk to your doctor before making any decisions about medications or treatments.