B12 and Lipotropic (MIC) Injections in Costa Mesa
Vitamin B12 and lipotropic compound (methionine, inositol, choline — "MIC") injections support energy and fat metabolism. We use them as add-ons inside our compounded GLP-1 protocols and as standalone services for patients who don't need GLP-1 therapy.
What B12 does for patients on a GLP-1 protocol
GLP-1 medications reduce appetite, which often reduces total food intake — including foods that supply B12 (animal products primarily). Many patients on month two or three of a protocol notice fatigue that responds well to supplemental B12. We screen B12 status during the initial visit and either prescribe oral supplementation or schedule injections depending on the labs.
What "lipotropic" / MIC actually contains
- Methionine — sulfur amino acid involved in liver detox pathways and methylation.
- Inositol — supports insulin signaling and lipid metabolism.
- Choline — required for liver function and fat transport.
- B12 — sometimes added to MIC for energy support.
The MIC combination supports liver fat metabolism and is paired with calorie restriction and exercise as part of a broader weight-loss protocol. It is not a stand-alone weight-loss treatment.
How we use it in our practice
For most NHWL patients on the 90-day GLP-1 program, B12 is added if the initial labs show low or low-normal levels. Lipotropic compound is offered as an optional add-on and given weekly. Patients can self-administer at home or come into the clinic for in-person injection.
What it doesn't do
- It doesn't replace the GLP-1 weight-loss effect. Patients who try B12/MIC alone for weight loss typically see minimal change.
- It doesn't replace nutrition. Calorie balance and protein intake matter more than any injection.
- It doesn't substitute for clinical care. The injections are part of a physician-supervised protocol, not a stand-alone consumer product.
Frequently asked questions
What is in a lipotropic (MIC) injection?
Methionine, inositol, and choline — three compounds that support fat metabolism and liver function. Some formulations add B12. The exact formulation is documented on the prescription.
Does B12 help with weight loss?
Not directly. B12 supports energy metabolism and is often low in adults on calorie-restricted diets. Patients on GLP-1 therapy with reduced food intake benefit from supplemental B12 to maintain energy. Weight-loss effect comes from the GLP-1; B12 supports the protocol.
How often?
Common cadence is weekly to biweekly. Frequency depends on labs, GLP-1 protocol, and clinical response. Often combined with the weekly GLP-1 injection.
Is it part of the 90-day program?
Sometimes. Some compounded preparations include B12; standalone B12 or MIC are available as add-ons. Pricing and inclusion are discussed during the consultation.
Can I do B12 injections without the GLP-1 program?
Yes. B12 and lipotropic injections are available as standalone services for patients who don't want or aren't candidates for GLP-1 therapy.
This page is informational only and not medical advice. B12 and lipotropic injections are physician-prescribed and administered as part of a documented clinical evaluation. Individual results vary. Pricing for B12 and MIC services is provided during the consultation based on the patient's specific protocol.