The Pine Slim is a Korean lipolytic that pairs pine bark extract with phosphatidylcholine (PPC), deoxycholate, L-carnitine, and riboflavin. The manufacturer positions it for face and body. It comes in 10 ml vials. Injectable fat dissolving is a medical procedure for a licensed professional, never a do-it-yourself step.
What is in The Pine Slim?
The Pine Slim is a PPC-based lipolytic with a botanical twist, packed as 10 ml by 5 vials. Its core is phosphatidylcholine (PPC), a fat-emulsifying compound, paired with deoxycholate, a bile salt. Around that sit pine bark extract (marketed as an antioxidant), L-carnitine, and riboflavin (vitamin B2).
The manufacturer’s pitch leans on the pine bark: “pain-free” injection, less post-treatment swelling and redness, and a “natural” feel. Those are positioning claims, not regulatory findings. If you want the enzyme-only, PPC-free cousin in this family, see Pine Bottle. For a straightforward PPC body sibling, see Lipolume.
Log Notes. This page explains what The Pine Slim is and how its maker describes it. It gives no volumes, depths, point spacing, session counts, mixing steps, or technique. Those belong to a licensed professional, not a blog. Nothing here is medical advice, and injectable fat dissolving is never a do-it-yourself procedure.
How does the PPC-plus-pine-bark blend work?
The fat-dissolving work is the same PPC chemistry; the pine bark is positioned as a comfort and anti-inflammatory extra. Published reviews describe PPC as emulsifying fat and deoxycholate as disrupting the fat-cell membrane (PMC review of injection lipolysis). Pine bark extract and riboflavin are marketed as support ingredients, not as fat-removal agents.
A “pain-free” or “natural” label is reassuring marketing, not a safety grade. Whatever the additives, this is still a PPC-and-deoxycholate injection, and the comfort claims are the maker’s, not a regulator’s.
Is The Pine Slim FDA-approved or safer?
Not approved, and “pain-free” is the maker’s claim, not a proven fact. The only injectable the U.S. Food and Drug Administration has approved for dissolving fat is deoxycholic acid (Kybella), and only for fat under the chin (submental fat). PPC products like The Pine Slim, botanicals or not, are generally not FDA-approved.
The FDA has warned directly that fat-dissolving injections that are not FDA-approved can be harmful (FDA, fat-dissolving injections). Adding an antioxidant may change how a formula feels, but “different” is not the same as “risk-free,” and any injectable lipolysis is a clinical procedure for a licensed professional, never DIY.
What is worth tracking?
A gradual course and an honest record. Lipolytics act over weeks, so the comparison that matters is month over month, not the day of treatment, and reactions like swelling and tenderness are commonly reported even with comfort-focused formulas. A dated record beats memory.
That is the role Dosefi can play. You log each session with its date and a photo, set a reminder for the review window your provider gives you, and self-rate the treated area over the following weeks so a real timeline replaces guesswork. A log never makes a procedure safe. It keeps your own history organized for the conversations that matter.
A grounded takeaway
The Pine Slim is a PPC-and-deoxycholate lipolytic dressed up with pine bark extract, L-carnitine, and riboflavin, positioned for face and body. The honest headline is regulatory: only submental deoxycholic acid is FDA-approved, and the FDA warns non-approved fat-dissolving injections can be harmful. Treat “pain-free” as marketing. This is a medical decision for a licensed professional, never a DIY route.
Sources
- “Using Fat-Dissolving Injections (Are Not FDA-Approved, Can Be Harmful)” (FDA). Regulatory caution that non-approved fat-dissolving injections can cause harm.
- “Injection lipolysis review” (PMC). Background on how PPC and deoxycholate are described in the literature.
