SLIM POINT is a Korean enzyme-style lipolytic built on cyanocobalamin (vitamin B12), bromelain, and lecithin rather than PPC or deoxycholic acid. It comes in face and body pack sizes. Injectable fat dissolving is a medical procedure for a licensed professional, never a do-it-yourself step.

What is in SLIM POINT?

SLIM POINT is an enzyme-and-vitamin lipolytic, packed as 10 ml vials for body and 5 ml vials for face. Its headline ingredient is cyanocobalamin (vitamin B12), which the maker positions as a fat-metabolism activator. Alongside it sit bromelain, a pineapple enzyme, and lecithin, derived from soy and marketed for fat emulsification.

The manufacturer’s pitch is “virtually painless,” low swelling, and an option for people who saw little from standard PPC products. Those are positioning claims, not regulatory findings. SLIM POINT shares the enzyme approach with Pure Bottle and Yellow Bottle, which is the natural family to compare it against.

Log Notes. This page explains what SLIM POINT 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 is a B12 enzyme lipolytic different?

It skips the usual PPC-and-deoxycholate chemistry for an enzyme-and-vitamin blend, but the route is still an injection. Most fat dissolvers lean on PPC and deoxycholate, described in published reviews as emulsifying and disrupting fat cells (PMC review of injection lipolysis). SLIM POINT instead positions B12 and bromelain as the active drivers.

A vitamin-forward, “painless” formula sounds gentle, and that is exactly the framing to question. Vitamin B12 is familiar in other contexts, but injecting any lipolytic under the skin is a medical procedure, and the comfort claims are the maker’s, not a regulator’s.

Is SLIM POINT FDA-approved or safer?

Not approved, and “painless” 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). Enzyme-and-vitamin products like SLIM POINT 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). A B12-and-bromelain formula may behave differently, but “different” is not the same as “risk-free,” and any injectable lipolysis is a clinical procedure for a licensed professional, never a DIY attempt.

What is worth tracking?

A gradual course and an honest record. The maker advertises fast changes, but the comparison that matters is still month over month, not the day of treatment, and reactions like swelling and tenderness are commonly reported even with low-pain 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

SLIM POINT is an enzyme-style lipolytic built on vitamin B12, bromelain, and lecithin, sold in face and body sizes. 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 “painless” and “fast” as marketing. This is a medical decision for a licensed professional, never a DIY route.

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