
You settle into the chair. Thirty to sixty quiet minutes, a drip mixed to your labs — hydration, vitamins, antioxidants, amino acids — and you walk out lighter than you came in. No downtime. No grogginess.
An oral supplement has to survive your stomach, your gut, and a long list of variables before any of it reaches your cells. A drip skips that line entirely — fluids, vitamins, minerals, antioxidants, or amino acids straight into the bloodstream, fully available within the hour.
Your blend is chosen for you — high-dose vitamin C, glutathione, NAD+, B-complex, magnesium, amino acids — whatever the lab work suggests you're actually short on. You're in a comfortable in-office chair, under medical supervision, the whole time.
If your plan calls for high-dose vitamin C, we run a one-time G6PD screen before your first session. Your clinician will flag anything else worth checking for the blend you've chosen.
Two things to know up front: drips here are supportive wellness, not disease treatment — and they earn their keep when they're built off your micronutrient and metabolic panel, not pulled off a menu.
When it earns the chair.
Most patients feel something during the drip — clearer head, the thirst easing — and the rest unfolds across the next day or two.
Nothing waits on digestion. Hydration and nutrients are in circulation while you're still in the chair.
The blend is chosen for what your labs and your goals call for — recovery, energy, immune, glow — not a default cocktail.
Quiet chair, supervised the whole time, no downtime after. Easy to slot into a lunch break.
Think of each as a starting point, not a prescription — your provider tunes it to your labs and what you're trying to feel. Every drip is run in-office, under medical supervision.
A one-time G6PD screen is required before high-dose vitamin C protocols. Drips are wellness-supportive and not intended to diagnose or treat disease.
The longevity drip on the menu — a slow infusion built around the coenzyme your mitochondria rely on, and run at a pace your body will actually tolerate.
NAD+ (nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide) is a coenzyme that sits at the center of how your cells turn fuel into usable energy — every mitochondrion in your body depends on it. Levels fall steadily through adult life, and the gap shows up as the slow drag patients describe long before any lab will flag it.
We deliver it as a slow IV infusion — typically 500 to 1,000 mg over two to three hours. The pace isn't a stylistic choice. Pushed too fast, NAD+ causes chest tightness, flushing, and nausea; run at the right rate, it's well tolerated. A clinician stays in the room with you and titrates to how you're feeling, not to a clock.
Patients most often report mental clarity, sustained energy through the afternoon, faster recovery from training, and a general sense of vitality returning across the first several sessions. Most protocols start with a loading phase — four to ten sessions across four to eight weeks — and then settle into a monthly maintenance cadence.
Honest framing: NAD+ infusion is used off-label for anti-aging and longevity support. The cellular biology rationale is well established — the human longevity evidence is still emerging. It sits alongside peptides, HRT, and weight-loss medicine on the same longevity chart, not above it.
Straight answers about the drip, the labs behind it, and what a session actually feels like.
You can book a hydration or wellness drip without labs — that's a fine place to start. But the drips that earn their keep are the ones built off your micronutrient and metabolic panel. If you're chasing energy, recovery, or immune support over time, we'd rather aim than guess.
Plan on thirty to sixty minutes in a quiet, reclining chair — longer for NAD+. A small IV catheter goes in the arm or hand; most people feel a cool sensation as the fluid runs. You can read, work, or just close your eyes. A clinician is with you the whole time.
Hydration and B-complex effects often arrive during the drip — a clearer head, the thirst easing. Glutathione, vitamin C, and NAD+ benefits tend to unfold over the next day or two. Nothing waits on digestion.
It depends on what you're using it for. A one-off before a wedding or after a flight is reasonable. For ongoing immune, recovery, or cellular-energy support, most patients land on every two to four weeks — we revisit the cadence at follow-up.
Both have strong safety records when dosed correctly under supervision. High-dose vitamin C requires a one-time G6PD screen first — a rare enzyme deficiency makes it unsafe, and we won't run the protocol until that's cleared. NAD+ is well tolerated but is infused slowly, because pushing it too fast can feel uncomfortable in the chest. We pace it to you.
No — IV nutrient therapy is supportive wellness, not disease treatment, and isn't a covered medical benefit. We're transparent about pricing up front, and HSA/FSA eligibility varies by plan and indication.
IV formulations are most effective when designed against your micronutrient panel — what you actually need, not a default cocktail.
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