Hi I always did mine in the tummy there is no muscles there so I am told. . I never had a problem some redness some times no bruses or rash.I did 24 weeks rib and peg. finished last of June.
Good luck and stay strong it will pass just seems like it takes forever. But in the end we all pray for the same thing UND then SVR.
bbj
My husband did his Interferon shots on his abdomen.
Advocate1955
I agree with stomach shots.....I have never had a problem with switching around the stomach and have no redness or soreness. I have too many veins in my legs so it just seemed scary to me as I didn't want to hit a vein.
Good luck.
I always injected in the fat on my stomach because my legs are pretty muscular. After a few days the sites got red and sometimes itchy. It took weeks for the red marks to fade, so I always had three or four blotchy patches on my abdomen. Near the end of treatment, they burned when I got in the bath.
Also in the last six to eight weeks, in some injection sites the skin started to get very dry and wrinkled. Kind of like the skin on an elephant.
I once hit muscle going in and yes, it was painful and ached for a few days after.
Good luck with it.
rk
rk
I preferred the stomach area, because I had loose skin, from having the four babies. I would rotate spots...I would go about 2 inches from either side of the navel,.(like the chart showed me to do)
For some reason, the first couple of months yielded a red patch of skin, but once my body got used to the Interferon, I never had a red spot or bruise again.
I think the idea is to try to avoid hitting muscle, because that is more painful, and takes slightly longer to absorb~
My legs are skinny and muscular, so I never even considerd the thigh. I would definitely stick to the spots on the chart, which comes with the Interferon Insert
my study nurse told me not to inject at the inner thigh. i had red marks on the thighs the first 6 weeks and then they faded. did not have any marks for the remaining 42 weeks. good luck. belle
Did first 4 injections in Dr. Office, check the injection sites and application. Have more than enough fat on thighs, so alternate legs and do not inject inside thigh area. Have redness after a few days and then it fades to kinda a dark bruise look, but doesn't hurt. Only had one bruise after injection, my wbc, platelets, etc were off. The dark "bruise" look fades over a few weeks.
drink lots of water like others say.
Good luck!
I encourage you to call the hotline. During the training one of the handouts I received was a a diagram that looks like the one from the Peg site:
Click on this:
http://www.medhelp.org/user_photos/show/311354?personal_page_id=414409
All the steps are on this link:
http://www.pegasys.com/patient/for-patients/expect/how/vial-injections/index.html
Here is a forum link since it is late and I am not sure how many people will respond right now:
http://www.medhelp.org/posts/Hepatitis-C/Shots/show/1721680
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I was taught to practice injection site rotation so I administer a shot in each site on the diagram as I go along. I administer three shots a week (what with being on Procrit).
The more people post you will find everyone is taught different things. Some people only inject in the belly whereas others the thighs. A lot has to do with where you have the most fat.
The inner part of your leg should not matter. I don't have much belly or thigh fat so site rotation helps in my case. On my last visit the NP actually suggested I inject my last dose of Procrit in the bum. Uhhh... no thanks. I am sure I can find a glob of something on the outer thigh.....
Star, if you look at the peg info., it shows a picture of the ideal spots on thighs or abdomen for injection. For the most part, I preferred to inject into belly fat. Usually the site would get red after a few days. This seems to be common. Inner thigh seems like that would be more tender.
Call the hotline if you have any issues. Don't be afraid to ask anything here. We all understand wanting to get it right. Take your meds on time. Drink the insane mega-ounces of water. Make sure you get the appropriate labs done.
And, you'll be fine.
Cheers,
C