I’ve definitely seen it talked about, but I personally don’t recommend mixing Liporase (hyaluronidase) into fat dissolvers—and here’s why:
1. Completely different jobs
Liporase is an enzyme that breaks down hyaluronic acid (HA)—it’s meant for dissolving filler, not fat. Fat dissolvers (like PPC, deoxycholic acid, etc.) work by destroying fat cells, which is a totally different mechanism.
2. The “theory” vs reality
Some people claim adding Liporase helps “spread” or “enhance” fat dissolvers, but that’s not really what it’s designed for. At best, it may increase diffusion slightly—but that also means:
- Less control of where product goes
- Higher risk of uneven results
There are mentions of it helping with dispersion in some contexts, but not as a standard or widely accepted practice.
3. Increased risk (this is the big one 🚨)
Hyaluronidase:
- Can spread beyond your target area
- Can break down your body’s natural HA too
- Carries allergy risk (especially if sensitive to bee stings)
So mixing it into a fat dissolver = less predictability + more variables
4. Not standard or evidence-based
In medical/aesthetic practice, Liporase is used:
- For dissolving filler
- For emergency vascular occlusion
Not as a routine additive to fat dissolvers. It should also only be used in controlled, professional settings.
✨ My honest take:
I would keep them separate. Fat dissolvers already work if dosed and placed correctly—you don’t need to “hack” them with Liporase.
If anything, adding it can make your results:
- less controlled
- harder to predict
- potentially riskier