Your doctor will inject this drug. It is used to relax a patient before anesthesia, so it's not really something you should have at home.
butt or thigh
In the neck in the triangular muscle area.
The most common ways are to snort, swallow, smoke, inject into a vein, or inject into a muscle.
If carrying enough weight and muscle; it can be injected into the upper thigh. The idea is to inject into an area with sufficient fat and muscle to avoid an interveinous injection. Intramuscular - into the blood system via the muscle layer Interveinous - into the blood system via a vein
I don't believe we synthesize artificial atp.
You inject it in your butt or thigh. Need to be careful with the thigh and make sure you stay in the area about half way between the hip and the knee.
Your blood sugar drops dramatically and you can and will get hypoglycemia (low blood sugar).
2 ml is the standard for the deltoid muscle this answer is according to the NLN
Don't inject into your arm. Unless you are using some time of "site injectable" steroid, which only effects the muscl injected, you never want to inject into your arm. There are places in the shoulder to inject but there are a lot of nerves there and it is risky. Inject into your butt, or quardricep. There is plenty of muscle, and hard to miss. Plus it's convenient to have both hands to use while you are doing this.
Well I dont know why you would inject water into your muscle...BUT...it would be absorbed in the capilaries and eventually filtered through your renal system.
This is a subcutaneous vaccine, so your vet will inject it below the skin. Some vets use the extra skin over the shoulder blades while others will place it further down a limb. If the vaccine is injected into a muscle, it can cause severe problems, including muscle damage and necrosis.
I would recommend having your veterinarian demonstrate the technique if you are unsure of what you are doing. The easiest and safest muscle to inject into at home is the semitendinosus, which is the muscle that runs along the back of the hind leg, from the tail to the hock joint. Firmly grasp the the muscle belly (about halfway down the leg) and swiftly but smoothly insert the needle into the muscle. Pull back on the syringe plunger and make sure you don't get air or blood back in the needle; if nothing shows up, inject the medication.