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Rapastinel Dosing Calculator

Rapastinel (GLYX-13): NMDA receptor glycine-site partial agonist.

Pre-filled with the most-reported community reconstitution protocol for Rapastinel. See how 1 mL and 2 mL of bacteriostatic water change concentration and syringe-draw volume, then adjust the calculator below for your own vial.

Quick answer · Community-reported standard

A 10 mg vial of Rapastinel reconstituted with 2 mL of bacteriostatic water yields a concentration of 5.00 mg/mL. At that concentration, a 1 mg dose of Rapastinel equals 20 units on a U-100 insulin syringe (0.200 mL). Rapastinel is typically administered once weekly via subcutaneous.

Rapastinel reconstitution: 1 mL vs 2 mL bac water

Bacteriostatic water volume is flexible. Less water means higher concentration and smaller injection volumes; more water means lower concentration and easier dose precision. Both options below are valid for a 10 mg vial.

BAC water addedConcentrationVolume per 1 mg doseDraw on U-100 syringe (units)
1 mL10.00 mg/mL0.100 mL10 units
2 mL5.00 mg/mL0.200 mL20 units
Based on a 10 mg vial of Rapastinel reconstituted with bacteriostatic water. Insulin-syringe units assume a standard U-100 syringe (100 units = 1 mL).

Calculate your Rapastinel dose

Alternative Rapastinel protocols

Beyond the default above, Rapastinel is also reported in the following protocols. Use these as starting points and recalculate with the tool above.

Intranasal Experimental Protocol

Community
Dose
1-3 mg
Frequency
1-2 times weekly
Duration
4-6 weeks
Route
Intranasal

Some users attempt intranasal delivery for brain penetration; no data supports this route for rapastinel

Phase 2 Clinical Trial (Treatment-Resistant MDD)

Clinical
Dose
Single IV dose of 1, 5, 10, or 30 mg/kg. The 5 and 10 mg/kg doses demonstrated significant antidepressant effects.
Frequency
Single dose (phase 2); weekly IV infusion explored in phase 3
Duration
Single dose in phase 2; repeated weekly dosing in phase 3

Clinical development was discontinued after phase 3 failure in March 2019. These doses are from clinical trial protocols and are not approved for therapeutic use.

Rapastinel reconstitution & storage

In clinical trials, rapastinel was supplied as a lyophilized powder for IV reconstitution in sterile saline. Specific reconstitution volumes were not publicly disclosed. The compound is no longer in clinical development.

Lyophilized powder stored at -20 degrees C. Reconstituted solutions used immediately in clinical trial settings.

Rapastinel dosing FAQ

How much bacteriostatic water should I add to a 10 mg vial of Rapastinel?

The community standard is 2 mL of bacteriostatic water for a 10 mg Rapastinel vial. That gives a concentration of 5.00 mg/mL, so a 1 mg dose is 20 units on a U-100 insulin syringe. Adding 1 mL instead doubles the concentration to 10.00 mg/mL and halves the draw to 10 units. Less water = smaller injection volume but harder to measure precisely.

How many syringe units is a 1 mg dose of Rapastinel?

On a standard U-100 insulin syringe, a 1 mg dose of Rapastinel is 20 units when the 10 mg vial is reconstituted with 2 mL of bacteriostatic water (5.00 mg/mL). If you use 1 mL of bac water instead, draw 10 units (10.00 mg/mL).

What is the standard Rapastinel dose?

Community-reported protocols for Rapastinel typically use 1 mg–5 mg once weekly via Subcutaneous. 1 mg is a common starting dose. Adapted from clinical IV dosing; community uses SubQ as a practical alternative to IV infusion

How long does a vial of Rapastinel last at 1 mg once weekly?

A 10 mg vial of Rapastinel contains roughly 10 doses at 1 mg per injection. At once weekly dosing, that is approximately 70 days (about 10 weeks) of supply per vial. Reconstituted Rapastinel should generally be used within 28 days when refrigerated.

Where do you inject Rapastinel?

Rapastinel is typically injected subcutaneous. Common sites reported in the literature and by users include: Intravenous infusion (clinical trial setting only). Rotate sites with each injection to reduce localized irritation.

Can I use sterile water instead of bacteriostatic water for Rapastinel?

Bacteriostatic water (containing 0.9% benzyl alcohol as a preservative) is strongly preferred for multi-dose vials like Rapastinel because it inhibits microbial growth and lets a single vial be used over multiple weeks. Sterile water has no preservative and should generally be reserved for single-use preparations only.

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Medical Disclaimer

This website is for educational and informational purposes only. The information provided is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease. Always consult with a qualified healthcare professional before using any peptide or supplement.