TL;DR — what is Fat Blaster?
Fat Blaster is a lipotropic injectable blend combining methionine, inositol, choline, and B-complex vitamins (often called the MIC formula) to support hepatic fat metabolism. Unlike localized lipolytics, Fat Blaster works systemically by enhancing the liver's ability to mobilize and process fat stores.
How Fat Blaster works (the science, in plain language)
The formula stacks three classes of nutrients with distinct metabolic roles. Methionine is a sulfur-containing amino acid that serves as a methyl donor in fat metabolism — it helps the liver process fatty acids efficiently. Inositol regulates insulin signaling and supports cellular fat transport. Choline is essential for the synthesis of phosphatidylcholine, the molecule that packages fats into lipoproteins for transport out of the liver. The B-complex vitamins (B1, B6, B12) act as cofactors across the energy-metabolism cycle, particularly in converting fats and carbohydrates to usable ATP. Together, these compounds upgrade the liver's fat-processing capacity, support energy levels during caloric deficits, and help prevent fatty liver accumulation. Fat Blaster does not destroy fat cells — it accelerates the body's ability to burn stored fat as fuel.
What clinical research shows
Choline's role in lipid transport and fatty-liver prevention is well-established (Annual Review of Nutrition). Inositol's impact on insulin sensitivity in metabolic conditions is documented in European Review for Medical and Pharmacological Sciences (2015). Combined MIC injection studies have shown supportive roles in body-composition trials when paired with caloric deficit and resistance training.
Reference dosing from clinical trials
Consult a licensed Philippine medical professional before starting injectable lipotropic protocols. Published reference dosing typically uses 1mL injected intramuscularly 1–3 times per week, with cycles running 8–12 weeks. Many protocols position Fat Blaster as a metabolic support adjunct alongside dietary changes and exercise rather than as a primary fat-loss agent.
Common side effects (and how individuals manage them)
- Mild injection-site soreness — alternate sites between gluteal and deltoid.
- Fishy body odor — occasional, related to choline metabolism; transient.
- Increased energy — expected from B12 component.
- Nausea — rare, usually with high doses.
- Insomnia if injected late — morning dosing preferred.
How Fat Blaster compares to other peptides
Versus Lemon Bottle or Aqualyx — Fat Blaster works systemically through the liver, while these injectable lipolytics destroy fat cells locally at the injection site. Versus AOD-9604 — AOD-9604 directly stimulates fat-cell lipolysis through receptor activation; Fat Blaster supports the metabolic machinery that processes mobilized fat. Researchers commonly stack Fat Blaster with appetite-suppressing peptides like Tirzepatide to support energy and liver health during prolonged caloric deficits.
Buying Fat Blaster in the Philippines
Noki Labs supplies Fat Blaster Lipotropic 10mL vials at ₱1,500, shipped cold-chain nationwide. Cash-on-delivery, 1–7 day delivery, free shipping over ₱2,500 with FREESHIP. Manila is our top demand city for lipotropic protocols — see Peptide Supplier Manila. Go to the Fat Blaster product page or browse Skin & Aesthetics. Shipping info: Shipping & Delivery.
FAQ
Is Fat Blaster a peptide?
No — it's a lipotropic blend of amino acids, vitamins, and choline. Often grouped with peptides because of similar injection format and metabolic purpose.
Can it be used during keto or low-carb diets?
Lipotropic injections are commonly stacked with low-carb clinical protocols to support liver fat processing.
How often is it injected?
Typical clinical protocols use 1–3 weekly intramuscular injections.
Will it cause weight loss alone?
Fat Blaster is a metabolic support adjunct; weight changes in trials are observed when paired with caloric deficit.
Always consult a licensed healthcare provider before starting any new peptide or wellness regimen. Individual results vary. Statements about our products are educational and not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease.
Last reviewed: May 2026 · Read more in our FAQ