HandsOnGeek t1_j4zbv1x wrote
Reply to comment by L0cked4fun in Is there any difference in efficacy when a vaccine is administered somewhere other than the upper arm (e.g. on the foot)? by MercurioLeCher
The injection is not supposed to be into the bicep. It's supposed to be into the deltoid.
L0cked4fun t1_j4zdm0h wrote
Thanks for that, the important part is no shoulder lol.
UrbanSpartan t1_j50d44r wrote
The deltoid is the shoulder muscle. Anything 2ml and less can be appropriately administered in the deltoid. It would be highly unusual if not impossible for them to enter into the joint space with the needles used for a IM injection. Additionally, even if they did it would have no effect on your rotator cuff, which is just a group of 4 muscles. Its not one physical structure like most people tend to assume. You need at least a 1.5 inch needle to enter into the glenohumeral space, the needles in IM injections are usually 1 inch or less and they are not going all the way through l. I'm 6'5" and I've never had an issue getting an IM shoulder injection. I also do joint space injections all the time and you have to be very specific in where you aim and how to even enter into the space as the acromion blocks most of the joint off.
ChefArtorias t1_j50rk9e wrote
So basically their story is crap is what you're saying?
HandsOnGeek t1_j50vd2g wrote
You see that's the thing, the Deltoid is the shoulder muscle. You definitely want the injection into the shoulder, because that is where the Deltoid muscle is. Just, into the muscle, not anywhere else like the joint capsule or whatever.
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