TL;DR — what is Lemon Bottle?
Lemon Bottle is a Korean-formulated lipolytic injectable combining riboflavin (vitamin B2), bromelain, and lecithin to break down localized fat deposits in clinical studies. Its yellow color and pineapple-derived enzyme content distinguish it from older phosphatidylcholine-based formulations.
How Lemon Bottle works (the science, in plain language)
The formulation is a three-part synergy. Lecithin (phosphatidylcholine) emulsifies fat — it disrupts the membranes of fat cells, allowing their contents to spill out. Bromelain, a proteolytic enzyme from pineapple stems, breaks down the structural proteins around the fat-cell cluster, supporting clearance and reducing post-injection swelling. Riboflavin (vitamin B2) acts as a co-factor in cellular fat metabolism and gives Lemon Bottle its signature yellow color. Together, the trio targets fat at three levels: membrane disruption, protein clearance, and metabolic processing of released fatty acids. The Korean origin is significant — it represents a refined, lower-irritation reformulation compared to first-generation lipolytics that often produced pronounced post-injection inflammation.
What clinical research shows
Studies of phosphatidylcholine-based injection lipolysis published in Dermatologic Surgery (Rotunda et al.) demonstrated significant adipocyte reduction at injection sites. More recent enzymatic-blend research on bromelain's anti-inflammatory properties supports its inclusion in modern lipolytic combinations. Lemon Bottle’s specific formulation has growing dermatology adoption in South Korea since 2022.
Reference dosing from clinical trials
Consult a licensed Philippine medical professional before starting any injectable lipolysis protocol. Published technique uses microinjection at 0.2–0.4mL per point, 1cm spacing, in a grid pattern across the target area. Sessions are spaced 2–4 weeks apart, with most protocols running 3–6 sessions for optimal results. Total per-session volume varies by treatment area.
Common side effects (and how individuals manage them)
- Localized swelling — lasts 3–7 days; ice and rest help.
- Bruising — minor, resolves within 1–2 weeks.
- Tenderness or warmth — expected inflammatory response.
- Lumps under skin — normal during fat-cell clearance phase, usually 2–3 weeks.
- Bromelain allergy — rare but possible; pineapple sensitivity is a contraindication.
How Lemon Bottle compares to other lipolytics
Versus Aqualyx (Italian phosphatidylcholine-only formulation) — Lemon Bottle adds bromelain and riboflavin for a less inflammatory profile. Versus Fat Blaster (a lipotropic vitamin-amino-acid blend) — Lemon Bottle is direct-injection localized fat reduction, while Fat Blaster targets systemic fat metabolism. Researchers and aesthetic practitioners often choose Lemon Bottle for cosmetic-focused subcutaneous fat targeting where minimizing inflammation matters.
Buying Lemon Bottle in the Philippines
Noki Labs supplies authentic Korean Lemon Bottle at ₱1,400 per vial, batch-verified for authenticity, shipped cold-chain nationwide. Cash-on-delivery, 1–7 day delivery, free shipping over ₱2,500 with FREESHIP. Iloilo and Bacolod are top demand cities for Visayan aesthetic clinics — see Peptide Supplier Iloilo. Visit the Lemon Bottle product page or browse Skin & Aesthetics. Shipping info: Shipping & Delivery.
FAQ
How do I verify authentic Korean Lemon Bottle?
Authentic vials carry batch codes traceable to the Korean manufacturer. Noki Labs provides batch-verification documentation per order.
How many sessions are typical?
Most published technique runs 3–6 sessions per area, 2–4 weeks apart.
What's the difference from oral fat-burners?
Lemon Bottle is a localized injectable lipolytic — it reduces fat at specific anatomical sites. Oral compounds work systemically.
Is the yellow color normal?
Yes — riboflavin (vitamin B2) gives the formulation its characteristic yellow.
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