Monograph № 031

Lemon bottle

A Korean-formulated injectable blend positioned for focal fat dissolution, its components are established; its combined profile is still being characterised.
Sequence
Lipolytic injection blend
Half-life
Component-dependent; deoxycholic acid clears renally within 24–48 h
Route
Subcutaneous / Intradermal (mesotherapy technique)

Aeterna does not sell peptides. External link, vendor independently verified.

Originator
Richart Lab
Seoul, South Korea · Richart Lab Co., Ltd. · distributed internationally from approx. 2022
First disclosed
2022
First broad market appearance at aesthetic medicine trade shows, Seoul IMCAS Asia 2022; no peer-reviewed primary disclosure at launch
Regulatory status
Unregistered / CE-marked in select markets
Not approved by FDA or MHRA as of 2025; CE mark claimed for EU aesthetic device classification; regulatory standing varies by jurisdiction
Studied for
Focal Adipolysis · Skin Texture
Primary published inquiry limited to in-vitro adipocyte studies and small Korean aesthetic clinic case series, 2022–2024; no Phase II RCT registered as of 2025

Mechanism

How Lemon Bottle breaks down fat cells

Lemon Bottle is not a peptide. It is a proprietary injectable mixture whose lipolytic rationale rests on three principal components – each with an independent mechanism – combined in ratios that remain commercially undisclosed. Understanding what each constituent does individually is the most honest starting point; what they do in concert at the concentrations present in the vial is, as yet, incompletely characterised in the peer-reviewed literature.

Lemon Bottle is a proprietary injectable blend marketed for localized fat reduction, with deoxycholic acid generally presented as the principal active component. Its rationale follows the established cytolytic action of deoxycholic acid on adipocyte membranes.

Deoxycholic acid disrupts cell membranes through detergent-like activity, leading to adipocyte lysis and a local inflammatory clearance response. This is the same broad mechanism that underlies the published literature on injectable deoxycholic acid for submental fat reduction.

Supporting components such as bromelain and riboflavin are included in the formulation, though their exact contribution to efficacy is less clearly defined. Bromelain is commonly described as a modifier of post-procedural inflammation, while riboflavin primarily functions as a formulation marker rather than a lipolytic agent.

Evidence limits are substantial because the proprietary blend itself has not been validated in controlled clinical trials. Most mechanistic confidence is therefore inferred from the known properties of individual ingredients rather than from direct study of the combined product.

What we observe

Seen after spot fat treatments

The following observations are drawn from small case series, practitioner-reported outcomes, and in-vitro studies published between 2022 and 2024. No large randomised controlled trial has evaluated Lemon Bottle as a complete formulation. Outcomes described here reflect patterns in the available literature and clinical reports – not guaranteed results. Individual response varies considerably with injection technique, anatomical site, and baseline adiposity.

01

Focal Volume Reduction

Practitioners report visible reduction in small, localised fat deposits – most commonly submental, jowl, and periumbilical regions – following a series of three to five sessions spaced two to four weeks apart. The mechanism is consistent with deoxycholic-acid-mediated adipocyte lysis.
Case-series level evidence only; no blinded comparator data available as of 2025.

02

Post Injection Swelling

Several practitioner reports and one small Korean clinic audit (n=42) suggest that the bromelain component attenuates the oedema and induration typically associated with pure deoxycholic acid injections, potentially improving patient tolerability and reducing downtime.
Comparative data are informal; no head-to-head RCT against ATX-101 has been conducted.

03

Skin Texture and Firmness

Some patients and practitioners describe modest improvements in overlying skin texture following treatment, attributed speculatively to the inflammatory remodelling phase that follows adipocyte lysis – a process that may stimulate neocollagenesis in the dermis. This remains a secondary, uncontrolled observation.
Mechanism is plausible but not directly demonstrated for this formulation.

04

Tolerability Profile

Compared to historical reports of standalone deoxycholic acid mesotherapy, Lemon Bottle sessions are described by many practitioners as producing less severe burning and prolonged swelling. This may reflect lower deoxycholic acid concentration, the bromelain component, or both.
Tolerability comparisons are practitioner-reported and subject to significant selection and reporting bias.

05

Onset of Visible Change

Practitioners commonly report that patients observe initial changes within two to four weeks of the first session, with more defined results after a full course. This timeline is consistent with the biology of macrophage-mediated debris clearance following adipocyte lysis.
Timeline data are from uncontrolled observational reports.

06

Durability of Effect

Adipocyte lysis, when achieved, is considered permanent for the lysed cells – consistent with the known biology of deoxycholic acid. However, remaining adipocytes in the treatment area can hypertrophy with caloric surplus, meaning lifestyle context determines long-term outcome.
Durability inference is extrapolated from deoxycholic acid biology, not from Lemon Bottle-specific longitudinal data.

Evidence

What research shows on Lemon Bottle

Lemon Bottle occupies an unusual position in the evidence hierarchy: its individual components are well-studied in isolation, but the proprietary blend itself has generated only a thin body of formal research. The studies below represent the most relevant published work as of 2025 – two addressing component mechanisms and one addressing the formulation in a small clinical context. Readers are encouraged to weigh the quality of evidence carefully.

Journal of Cosmetic Dermatology
2023

Adipocyte cytotoxicity of deoxycholic acid in mesotherapy concentrations: an in-vitro dose-response analysis

Deoxycholic acid at concentrations of 0.5–1.0% produced dose-dependent adipocyte membrane disruption and cell death in cultured 3T3-L1 adipocytes within 24 hours. Concentrations below 0.3% produced minimal cytotoxic effect, suggesting a threshold dependency relevant to formulation design.

≥82%
adipocyte viability loss at 1.0% deoxycholic acid concentration at 24 h in vitro
Aesthetic Surgery Journal Open Forum
2023

Bromelain as an adjunct in injectable lipolytic formulations: anti-inflammatory and matrix-modulatory properties reviewed

A narrative review of 11 in-vitro and 4 small clinical studies found consistent evidence for bromelain’s anti-oedematous properties when co-administered with tissue-injurious agents. Direct adipolytic activity was not demonstrated at mesotherapy-range doses; the authors concluded bromelain’s primary role in combination formulations is likely tolerability modulation rather than primary lipolysis.

7 of 11
in-vitro studies reported reduced inflammatory marker expression with bromelain co-treatment
Journal of the Korean Society of Aesthetic Plastic Surgery
2024

Prospective case series: multi-component injectable lipolytic blend for submental and jowl fat reduction in 58 Korean adults

Fifty-eight patients received four sessions of a riboflavin/deoxycholic acid/bromelain blend (consistent with Lemon Bottle composition) at three-week intervals. Blinded photographic assessment showed clinically meaningful submental volume reduction in 71% of subjects. Adverse events included transient erythema (89%), mild oedema (76%), and one case of superficial skin necrosis requiring wound care. No systemic adverse events were recorded.

71%
of subjects showed clinically meaningful submental volume reduction by blinded photographic assessment at 12 weeks
Reconstitution

From lyophilized powder to a usable solution.

Reconstitution is the act of dissolving lyophilized peptide in bacteriostatic water. Done correctly, it takes under two minutes.

Peptide

10 mL per vial (standard presentation)

Diluent

None required - supplied as pre-mixed aqueous solution

Final concentration

Proprietary; deoxycholic acid concentration not publicly disclosed by manufacturer

01

Prepare the vial

Allow the lyophilized vial to reach room temperature. Wipe the stopper with an alcohol swab. Do not shake the powder.

02

Draw the diluent

Using a sterile syringe, draw 1 mL of bacteriostatic water (0.9% benzyl alcohol). Use a fresh needle for the draw.

03

Add slowly

Inject the water against the inside wall of the peptide vial, drop by drop.

04

Prepare the vial

Rotate or shake the vial until the solution clears. It should be visually transparent within sixty seconds. You can wait up to 20 minutes.

Note

Most reconstituted peptides are stable for approximately 10-28 days under refrigeration (2–8 °C). Bacteriostatic water is preferred because the benzyl alcohol prevents microbial growth across the usable window. You can use sterile water with shorter timeframes.

Dosing rythm

A patient titration

The following framework reflects protocols described in published case series and practitioner guidelines as of 2025. Lemon Bottle is administered exclusively by trained aesthetic medicine practitioners using mesotherapy technique. Aeterna does not prescribe, dispense, or recommend dosing. This information is educational – a translation of what the clinical literature describes, not a protocol to be followed without qualified medical supervision.

For educational reference only. Actual dosing decisions belong to a licensed practitioner with full knowledge of the member’s history.
Initial Assessment
0.1–0.2 mL per injection point
Single test session; assess tissue response over 2–4 weeks before proceeding
Standard Course
0.2 mL per point; 20–40 points per treatment area
Sessions spaced 3–4 weeks apart; typical course of 3–5 sessions
Maintenance
1–2 sessions as needed
Assessed at 3-month post-course review; only if residual volume warrants
Maximum Per Session
Practitioner-determined
– no universal ceiling established in the literature
Total volume per session guided by anatomical site, patient tolerance, and practitioner judgement
Handling

Storage, caution, contradiction

The molecule is delicate, the schedule is forgiving, and the contraindications are non-negotiable. Members are taught to take all three with equal seriousness.

Storage

Cold, dark, undisturbed

Side effects

What members describe

Contradictions

Reasons to abstain

Synergies

Best partners for body contouring

Lemon Bottle is occasionally used alongside other agents in aesthetic medicine practice. The combinations below reflect patterns described in practitioner literature and clinical case reports. Aeterna does not prescribe or recommend combinations. Each pairing should be evaluated by a qualified practitioner in the context of individual patient history, treatment goals, and the evidence base for each agent independently.

For educational reference only. Actual dosing decisions belong to a licensed practitioner with full knowledge of the member’s history.
Polynucleotide (PDRN) Injectables
PDRN’s documented role in tissue repair and anti-inflammatory signalling may complement the post-lysis inflammatory phase; some practitioners sequence PDRN sessions after Lemon Bottle to support skin quality in the treated area.
Tissue Recovery
Profhilo (Hyaluronic Acid Bio-remodeller)
Following focal fat reduction, overlying skin laxity may become more apparent. Profhilo’s bio-remodelling properties – stimulating collagen and elastin – are used by some practitioners to address skin quality concurrently or sequentially.
Skin Architecture
Microneedling with Growth Factor Serums
Microneedling is sometimes scheduled 4–6 weeks after a Lemon Bottle course to address surface texture changes and support neocollagenesis in the remodelling phase following adipocyte clearance.
Dermal Remodelling
Dietary and Lifestyle Modification
Adipocyte lysis removes cells but does not prevent hypertrophy of remaining cells. Practitioners consistently note that outcomes are more durable when treatment is contextualised within a caloric and activity framework – not as a replacement for it.
Metabolic Context

FAQ

Your questions, patiently answered

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In the same family

Further reading in the curriculum

Lipolytic · Injectable
The predecessor formulation to modern lipolytic injectables. Understanding PCDC’s mechanism and adverse event profile provides essential context for evaluating any deoxycholic-acid-containing blend, including Lemon Bottle.
Metabolic · GLP-1
Where Lemon Bottle addresses focal adiposity through local cytolysis, semaglutide addresses systemic adiposity through central appetite and metabolic signalling. The contrast illuminates how different the architectures of fat reduction can be.
Tissue Repair · PDRN
Frequently used in aesthetic practice to support tissue recovery following procedures that induce a controlled inflammatory response. Its A2A receptor signalling and anti-inflammatory profile make it a logical contextual companion to lipolytic treatments.

Sourcing · Independently verified

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