Build a patient's protocol or lab panel here, then hand them a QR code or file they scan straight into Zenject. No transcription, no guesswork, nothing left ambiguous.
You set the precise schedule, dose, vial + BAC water, blends, and titration. The builder makes no recommendations and requires an explicit schedule, so nothing is ambiguous for the patient to mismanage.
Generate a QR code or a .zenject file. The patient scans it with their camera or taps the file, and it loads into their app, ready to track. No typing on their end.
100% client-side. No patient data is transmitted or stored — no servers, no accounts. The QR and file are built right here in your browser, with zero third-party network calls.
Build a full protocol, or enter a dated lab panel (70+ markers) the patient can track and trend over time alongside their compounds.
Stepped dose ramps, combo-vial ingredient splits, and vial mg + BAC water that drive the patient's draw-units calculator automatically.
No account, no cost. Build and send to as many patients as you like, with nothing to set up.
Fill in the protocol or lab panel: exact compounds, doses, schedule, reconstitution.
One tap creates a QR code and a downloadable file, built entirely on your device.
They scan the QR with the iPhone camera, or open the file — with a preview before anything saves.
Daily doses, site rotation, labs and trends. Send an updated protocol anytime the plan changes.
Zenject is a personal tracking tool, not medical advice. The builder does not recommend or validate doses or schedules; it records exactly what you enter. The clinical decisions, and responsibility for them, stay with you.
Zenject is a personal tracking tool for educational and informational use only. It is not a medical device and does not provide medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment.
Zenject does not recommend, prescribe, endorse, or validate any compound, dose, schedule, or protocol. It only records what is entered. Reference ranges are shown for context and vary by lab and individual.
The provider entering a protocol is solely responsible for its clinical content. Patients should always consult a qualified healthcare professional before starting, changing, or stopping anything.