Fat Loss · 10ml × 10 vials
In plain terms: Lipo-C + B12 is a research compound - injectable, long-acting and well studied.
Lipo-C + B12 is a multi-ingredient lipotropic injection: a blend of methionine, inositol, choline, and vitamin B12 (typically methyl- or cyanocobalamin), often with L-carnitine added in the "Lipo-C" branding. The "lipotropic" label is old pharmacology language for substances that promote the breakdown and transport of fat out of the liver. Methionine is a sulfur-containing essential amino acid that acts as a methyl donor through the SAMe pathway, supporting phosphatidylcholine synthesis and one-carbon metabolism. Choline is a structural component of phospholipids (lecithin) that move triglycerides out of hepatocytes into circulation as VLDL; classic 1950s human biopsy work in cirrhotic fatty-liver patients showed measurable bumps in hepatic phospholipid synthesis after IV methionine or oral choline. Inositol participates in cell signaling and aids fat transport in blood; rodent deficiency models pile triglycerides in the liver. B12 is a cofactor for methionine synthase and methylmalonyl-CoA mutase, so it pairs mechanistically with methionine and is the ingredient driving the perceived energy lift in deficient individuals. L-carnitine (when included) shuttles long-chain fatty acids into mitochondria for beta-oxidation, the actual fat-burning step.
What this stack does NOT do is meaningfully reduce body weight on its own. The lipotropic mechanism is liver-centric (handling fat already mobilized) not appetite-centric (the actual rate-limiting step in obesity). The only RCT comparable evidence in 214 adults found a 0.9 lb additional loss vs placebo at 3 months, not statistically significant. In customer-facing terms: it can support liver fat handling, methylation status, and energy in B12-low individuals, but it does not move the scale the way a GLP-1 does. Its actual home is as an adjunct alongside a GLP-1 (reta/tirz/sema) for the energy/metabolic-support narrative, or as a standalone "shot in the arm" feel-good injection for customers who want a weekly lift.
Typical dose ranges by experience level - educational reference. Message us and we tailor it to you.
This is the standard medical weight loss clinic dose. Inject same day each week (most pick Monday morning). Pair with adequate hydration to avoid the kidney strain anecdotes. If you're B12-deficient at baseline, this dose alone will likely lift energy noticeably in the first 1-2 weeks; if you're already replete, expect minimal subjective effect.
This is the working dose for customers using it as a GLP-1 adjunct. The narrative is "metabolic support + energy" while the GLP-1 does the actual weight loss work. Twice-weekly is a common medical-weight-loss-clinic protocol (e.g., Mon/Thu). Do not inject the same day as your GLP-1 in the same site; rotate to a different muscle.
Higher-frequency dosing is what aesthetic/wellness clinics charge $50+ per shot for. There is no clinical evidence the higher frequency moves weight beyond the lower frequency, but the B12 saturation produces a more consistent energy floor. Some bodybuilders pair with standalone L-carnitine injections (LC600 at 600 mg/ml) for the fat oxidation arm if cutting hard. Do not exceed 3 ml in a single IM site.
Straight talk - what people actually report, and what the studies measured.
Peer-reviewed studies and clinical guidelines - tap any to read the source.
15291-9/abstract) - classic biopsy work showing hepatic phospholipid synthesis bumps after methionine/choline
Read study ↗PubMedInositol deficiency and hepatic triglyceridesrat model evidence for inositol's role
Read study ↗PubMedCyanocobalamin pharmacokinetics, Nava-Ocampo 2004B12 half-life and excretion data
Read study ↗PubMedCyanocobalamin StatPearlsfull B12 monograph
Read study ↗PubMedL-carnitine supplementation meta-analysis, 37 RCTs30053-X/abstract) - 1.2 kg weight loss, modest effect
Read study ↗PubMedL-carnitine for weight management updated meta-analysisoverweight/obese subgroups only
Read study ↗Aggregated sentiment from public forums & socials - real-world reports, not individual endorsements.
Distinct B-vitamin body odor / breath: very common, lasts a day, harmless
"Lipo lumps": painful subcutaneous lumps at injection site when larger volumes (>1 ml) are given SubQ; resolves in a few days, fix by injecting IM instead
Energy lift in first 1-2 shots, especially in B12-low individuals: most-reported subjective effect
Mood lift: commonly reported, attributed to methylation support from methionine + B12 cofactor pair
"I felt nothing": equally common in users who are already B12-replete; this is the honest 50/50 community split
Urine turning bright yellow/orange: B12 excretion, harmless
Route: IM (intramuscular) preferred; SubQ is acceptable but can sting and form lumps at larger volumes
Injection site: outer thigh, glute, or deltoid for IM; abdomen/love handle for SubQ. Rotate sites because B12 + amino blend can sting and leave small bumps
Storage: refrigerated, multi-dose vial typically good 30-60 days after first puncture; check for cloudiness or color shift. Already in solution, no recon needed
Notes: Pinkish-red color is normal (B12). Distinct vitamin smell is normal and can come out of the skin/breath for a day. Inject slowly to reduce sting. Use a 23-25g needle for IM (1-1.5 inch) or 27-30g 1/2 inch for SubQ. Do not mix in the same syringe as a GLP-1 (separate injections, can be same day, different sites).