Super V Line Sol is a Korean lipolytic, sold as 10 ml vials and positioned especially for facial slimming around the jaw and “V-line.” The maker describes it as an indirect fat dissolver built on botanical and metabolic ingredients. Facial injection is high-risk and strictly for a licensed professional, never a DIY step.

What is in Super V Line Sol, and how is it positioned?

Super V Line Sol is a botanical lipolytic, packed as 10 ml by 5 vials, and aimed especially at the face: the jawline and the so-called “V-line” or tapered lower-face look. Its listed ingredients are plant-derived and metabolic rather than detergent-based: horse chestnut (Aesculus) extract, L-carnitine (which generally aids fatty-acid metabolism), walnut extract, and the amino acid tyrosine.

The maker’s framing is the interesting part. Rather than claiming it bursts fat cells directly, the manufacturer describes it as an indirect fat dissolver that works by speeding lymphatic circulation. That is a softer proposed mechanism than the bile-salt action of deoxycholic acid products. As always, treat the mechanism as the maker’s description, not proven fact.

Log Notes. This page explains what Super V Line Sol 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 facial injectable lipolysis is never a do-it-yourself procedure.

Does “indirect” and “herbal” make facial injection safe or approved?

No on both counts, and the face raises the stakes. 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. Indirect, herbal lipolytics like this one are generally not FDA-approved, and the FDA warns that non-approved fat-dissolving injections can be harmful (FDA, fat-dissolving injections).

Facial injection deserves extra caution. The face is dense with blood vessels and nerves, so injecting near the jaw is a high-risk procedure that only a trained professional should ever assess and perform. “Indirect” and “herbal” are positioning words, not a safety guarantee. If your real goal is a slimmer jaw, the muscle-relaxant route is a useful contrast: see our notes on Botox on the jaw and what a toxin can and cannot do.

What should you expect, and what is worth tracking?

A slow course and an honest log. Lipolytics act over weeks, so the comparison that matters is month over month, not the day of treatment, and facial swelling or tenderness is commonly reported afterward. A dated record beats memory.

That is the role Dosefi plays. 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 area 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

Super V Line Sol is a botanical, indirect lipolytic positioned for facial slimming and the jaw. The honest headline is twofold: only submental deoxycholic acid is FDA-approved, the FDA warns non-approved fat-dissolving injections can be harmful, and facial injection near vessels is genuinely high-risk. This is a medical decision for a licensed professional, never a DIY route.

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