Janoshik Analytical laboratory testing services

Janoshik LABS please explain your error. The damage to our reputation has been severe. The spectrum shows that the purity of the product is 99.48%. Why do you mark it as 0
Were they both supposed to be Tirz?

They're showing two different results. One Reta, one Tirz.

Good purity on both, but different products.
This.
Both are tirzepatide
We have three MS and HPLCs saying different, unfortunately.
 
But if they have any pre existing heart conditions and should not take Reta, only Tirz, it is a big deal

If SSA has never had red cap Reta this may be a source factory mixup?

Most likely. You can see where the mistake could occur. Wrong liquid put in to some vials, or installed wrong color cap onto finished vials.

Lyophilization process is:

-Vial filled with peptide liquid

-Rubber lyophilization stopper put in

-Freeze dryer "sucks" moisture out through stopper, leaving dry puck in vacuum sealed vial

-Metal collar with cap is crimped onto vial

I've seen this happen a couple of times before, and it happens more often than we realize because you can only be certain of what's in the vial thats actually been tested. There's no guarantee of what's in the rest of the kit. This isn't Pfizer. It's more like having a McDonalds worker make your drugs.

Luckily Reta mixed into a Tirz kit isn't a catastrophe. I doubt most people would notice. Most "wrong" peptides wouldn't be a major threat to health.

But if it had been 30mg Semaglutide, or 10mg MT-2, someone who thought they were injecting 15mg Tirz would've ended up in the hospital.
 
(for anyone confused by the Chromatographs, the circled "Tirz" on both is just a file name for the project, not an identification. Look at the retention time at the bottom, that's what indicates that the two results are different peptides.)
 
But if they have any pre existing heart conditions and should not take Reta, only Tirz, it is a big deal

If SSA has never had red cap Reta this may be a source factory mixup?
People with pre existing heart conditions would be wise not to roll the dice and use unknown dosages of tirzapetide.
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tldr: they tested a bunch of UGL gear and claims half of it was shit and a lot was inaccurately dosed and mislabelled, in australia.

I took the podcast transcript and got this :'>


Im listening to it right now.
brilliant
 
I was able to add GCMS. They did provide the results of ID and mass:
Here’s my @janoshik GCMS data for @DevonPharmacy Noxy Test Cyp 250.



IMG_5687.webp
IMG_5688.webpIMG_5547.webp
 

Hi @janoshik
Per CGMS, about 5% of T belongs to TE and 95% TC.

(1) Is there a specific tolerance before compounds appear in the test report? e.g we only see TC reported, but per GCMS we know TE is present at 5-15mg.
(2) Is this TC mg/ml shown on the report entirely TC or is it TE+TC
 
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Most likely. You can see where the mistake could occur. Wrong liquid put in to some vials, or installed wrong color cap onto finished vials.

Lyophilization process is:

-Vial filled with peptide liquid

-Rubber lyophilization stopper put in

-Freeze dryer "sucks" moisture out through stopper, leaving dry puck in vacuum sealed vial

-Metal collar with cap is crimped onto vial

I've seen this happen a couple of times before, and it happens more often than we realize because you can only be certain of what's in the vial thats actually been tested. There's no guarantee of what's in the rest of the kit. This isn't Pfizer. It's more like having a McDonalds worker make your drugs.

Luckily Reta mixed into a Tirz kit isn't a catastrophe. I doubt most people would notice. Most "wrong" peptides wouldn't be a major threat to health.

But if it had been 30mg Semaglutide, or 10mg MT-2, someone who thought they were injecting 15mg Tirz would've ended up in the hospital.
According to someone on discord; these are vials from two different kits.
 
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