IV THERAPY
IV THERAPY
IV therapy is a medical treatment designed to provide the body with the specific nutrients and resources it needs to heal and repair.
The human body requires vitamins, minerals, amino acids, and other vital nutrients to function. Over time, because of medications, poor quality diet, prolonged stress, exposure to environmental factors, and genetics can leave the body depleted. The first signs of this depletion usually show up in:
Skin
Hair
Nails
Joints
Non-essential organ systems
Essentially, the body steals nutrients from these areas to fuel the vital systems (ex. heart and lungs). When depletion is mild, dietary changes and supplementation can restore these resources. But when one becomes clinically drained, IV therapy is essential to recovery.
A significant amount of our nutrients from food and supplementation are lost in the digestive process, even more so with those with long term gut issues or have had surgical removal of digestive organs such as the gallbladder or colon resections. IV therapy bypasses the gut and goes straight to the blood stream providing immediate absorption. Furthermore, because of the limited receptivity of the GI system, IV therapy can provide the body with 10-100 times more vital nutrients than standard food and supplementation.
How do we get depleted?
Poor digestion
Low absorption supplements
Removal of digestive organs (gallbladder, parts of the colon, gastric bypass…)
Bowel disorders (ex. IBS, Ulcerative Colitis, Diverticulitis, Crohn's, Leaky Gut…)
Stress (demanding too much of the body for prolonged periods of time)
Chronic dieting
Underlying health issues
The body requires resources to perform daily activities, much like a car requires gasoline. When the body is not getting the vital nutrients it needs, the first sign is usually degrees of fatigue. This is the body’s way of conserving its resources by shutting down. The longer one is forced to operate through this depleted state, the degree of fatigue can become extreme.
The hair is made up of keratin proteins. Making new healthy hair cells requires a significant amount of nutrient reserves. When the body is operating in a deficit, it sees hair as a non-essential use of resources (you can survive without hair) so it will allocate those vital nutrients to other organ systems. This can leave one with fine brittle hair or hair loss.
The nails, like the hair, require a large amount of resources to grow healthy and strong. When nutrients are pulled from the nails, we will see many of the following symptoms:
Slow growth
Thin flexible nails
Brittle
Easily broken
Splitting in the nail
Discoloration
Lack of half moon
Ridging
Because of the amount of high-quality nutrition the nails require to be healthy and strong, malnutrition can often show its earliest signs in the nails.
The skin is the largest organ in the body, therefore requires a lot to maintain healthy glowing skin. Furthermore, the skin generates new cells at a very rapid rate, even more so contributing to the overall demand. Malnourished individuals can develop any of the following:
Redness
Depigmented patches
Mysterious rashes
Dark spots
Age spots
Dry cracked skin
Conventional skin treatments are typically ineffective for these individuals because the underlying deficiency has not been addressed.
The joints are a mineral-rich source of many of the body’s most vital resources. While the joints are essential for optimal function and quality of life, in a deficit, the body knows that joints are not required to maintain life. Therefore, in a depleted state, in addition to the joint not getting what they need to heal and repair, nutrients can actually be stripped from the bones and tissues. Overtime, this can lead to premature wear and tear, arthritis, osteoporosis, predisposition towards injury, and chronic pain conditions.
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Disclaimer: None of the statements on this page are intended to make any claims about HTT, but instead describe many of the basic functions of native human tissue. Per FDA Guidance, it is not necessary for the HCT/P in the recipient to perform all of the basic functions it performed in the donor in order to meet the definition of homologous use. Human Tissue Therapy, as we use that term on this website, are minimally manipulated cells and tissues intended for homologous use only. None of the mentioned statements have been evaluated by the FDA. As defined in 21 CFR 1271.3(c), homologous use means the repair, reconstruction, replacement, or supplementation of a recipient’s cells or tissues with an HTT/P that performs the same basic function or functions in the recipient as in the donor. Human Tissue Therapies are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure or prevent any disease including COVID-19.