Clinician reviewing an ozone therapy care plan with a patient.
Recovery & Longevity

What 10 Pass Ozone Therapy Actually Involves

Understand 10 pass ozone therapy, its protocol variations, screening considerations, and how physician-guided care supports personalized wellness planning.

Quick answer: 10 pass ozone therapy is a term commonly used for a multi-cycle form of major autohemotherapy, in which a clinician draws a measured amount of blood, combines it with a precise oxygen-ozone mixture in a closed medical system, and returns it intravenously. The “10 pass” description generally refers to repeating that cycle multiple times during one appointment. It is not a standardized medical term, and the actual number of cycles, volumes, and suitability should be determined through physician-supervised screening.

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For clients considering advanced wellness therapies, the distinction matters. A protocol marketed as 10 pass ozone therapy may sound straightforward, but its delivery, oversight, and intended role within a broader wellness plan can differ substantially between providers.

What does 10 pass ozone therapy mean?

In a conventional major autohemotherapy session, a controlled volume of blood is collected into a sterile, anticoagulated container, exposed to a calibrated oxygen-ozone gas mixture, then reinfused. A multi-pass protocol repeats this process in a sequence of smaller-volume cycles. Depending on the provider’s terminology and equipment, “10 pass” may mean ten circulation cycles, ten aliquots, or a protocol designed to achieve a specified cumulative blood volume.

That variability is why the name alone does not tell you whether a protocol is appropriate or how it will be administered. There is no universal clinical definition governing what every practice calls “10 pass.” A high-quality consultation should clarify the intended number of cycles, the method used, treatment duration, the clinician overseeing the session, and why that particular approach is being considered.

The procedure is sometimes discussed under broader terms such as major autohemotherapy, multi-pass ozone therapy, or high-dose ozone therapy. These phrases are often used interchangeably in wellness searches, although individual protocols may not be identical.

Why some clients seek a multi-pass protocol

Clients usually explore 10 pass ozone therapy as part of a longevity-focused approach rather than as a stand-alone answer to a medical concern. Common goals include oxygenation-focused wellness support, recovery support after demanding travel or training schedules, cellular wellness, energy support, and detox pathway support.

The proposed rationale centers on a controlled oxidative signaling stimulus. Ozone is highly reactive, so it is not administered intravenously as a gas. In autohemotherapy protocols, it is introduced outside the body into a blood sample within a closed system before reinfusion. Practitioners may incorporate this process into personalized plans intended to support the body’s normal adaptive and antioxidant responses.

Those potential wellness applications should be discussed with appropriate restraint. Responses vary, and research on ozone-based protocols is evolving and uneven across uses. A sophisticated program does not equate a wellness goal with a promise to treat a condition. It starts with an individual’s history, current care, medications, laboratory considerations, and tolerance for more intensive interventions.

10 pass ozone therapy versus EBO3 Therapy

Although both are oxygenation-focused advanced wellness therapies, 10 pass ozone therapy and EBO3 Therapy are different procedures.

Multi-pass ozone therapy generally uses repeated cycles of blood collection, ozone exposure, and reinfusion. EBO3 Therapy, also searched as EBOO Therapy, EBO2 Therapy, EBO Therapy, or EBO treatment, is an extracorporeal blood oxygenation and ozone-based process performed through specialized equipment. The blood moves through a controlled circuit designed for oxygenation and filtration support before being returned.

For the right candidate, each approach may have a place in a personalized protocol. The better choice depends on the individual’s objectives, health history, access considerations, and the provider’s assessment. Neither should be selected simply because a protocol has a more dramatic name or a higher number attached to it.

At EBO2 Therapy and Wellness, physician-supervised planning emphasizes the appropriate level of intervention for the client rather than a one-size-fits-all “more is better” model. Some clients may be better suited to a conventional ozone protocol, while others may wish to discuss EBO3 Therapy or complementary recovery-focused services.

What to expect during a provider-guided session

A multi-pass appointment typically begins with a private consultation and review of relevant health information. The care team should explain the proposed protocol in plain language, including whether the session involves ten discrete cycles or another multi-pass method.

During treatment, the client is positioned comfortably while the clinician establishes intravenous access. Small, controlled blood volumes are processed one cycle at a time using sterile single-use supplies and an appropriate medical ozone delivery system. The process is repeated according to the prescribed protocol, with monitoring throughout. Appointment length can vary based on the method, venous access, the number of passes, and whether other services are scheduled that day.

Some clients choose to pair a provider-guided ozone protocol with IV therapy, NAD+ therapy, glutathione support, hyperbaric oxygen therapy, red light therapy, or a broader cellular wellness plan. Pairing services is not automatically beneficial. Timing, hydration status, recovery demands, and individual tolerance all matter, which is why an integrated plan should be designed rather than assembled from a menu.

Screening and medical oversight are not optional details

Ozone-based procedures involve blood handling, intravenous access, anticoagulant use, and an oxidative exposure. They warrant a clinical setting, trained personnel, appropriate equipment, and clear escalation procedures. A concierge setting should feel private and comfortable, but it should never compromise medical standards.

Screening required before a multi-pass protocol may include a review of personal and family health history, current medications and supplements, known blood disorders, cardiovascular considerations, kidney function concerns, pregnancy status, prior reactions to intravenous procedures, and recent laboratory findings when indicated. Providers may also consider factors such as anemia, bleeding risk, anticoagulant therapy, glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase deficiency, active illness, and vein quality.

Not everyone is a candidate. A responsible provider may defer treatment, request further medical clearance, recommend a less intensive service, or advise against proceeding. That is not a limitation of concierge care. It is what individualized, medically responsible care looks like.

Clients should also understand practical risks and inconveniences. These can include bruising, discomfort at the IV site, lightheadedness, vasovagal reactions, and risks associated with venipuncture or blood processing. The treatment environment, sterile technique, protocol controls, and clinician experience are central considerations. Results vary, and no wellness procedure should replace diagnosis, treatment, or follow-up with a client’s primary or specialty medical team.

Questions worth asking before booking

Before committing to 10 pass ozone therapy, ask how the practice defines “10 pass” and how much blood is processed during each cycle. Ask who performs and supervises the procedure, what screening is required, how the ozone concentration is determined, and what monitoring occurs during the appointment.

It is also reasonable to ask why this protocol is being recommended instead of conventional major autohemotherapy, EBO3 Therapy, IV therapy, HBOT, or a phased plan. A credible answer should be specific to your goals and history, not a generic promise about toxins, immunity, or anti-aging.

For frequent travelers, executives, athletes, and clients pursuing healthy-aging strategies, the most useful conversation is often broader than one procedure. Sleep, training load, nutrition, stress exposure, current medications, biomarker trends, and recovery capacity may all shape the protocol. Advanced wellness therapies are best viewed as considered additions to that larger picture.

Accessing concierge ozone wellness care

EBO2 Therapy and Wellness offers private, consultation-based care in Rancho Palos Verdes, California, and West Palm Beach, Florida. Clients from the South Bay, greater Los Angeles, Orange County, Palm Beach, Jupiter, Boca Raton, and surrounding communities may seek physician-guided support for oxygenation-focused and longevity-focused wellness goals.

A private consultation is the appropriate starting point for anyone considering multi-pass ozone therapy. It allows the care team to determine whether the protocol aligns with your health profile, whether a different advanced wellness therapy may be more suitable, and how to build a personalized plan with appropriate pacing and oversight.

The value of a 10-pass approach is not found in the number itself. It is found in the judgment behind the protocol: careful screening, precise delivery, thoughtful integration with your broader wellness strategy, and a plan that respects your individual physiology.

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Sources & Evidence Context

EBO3 is a clinic-branded wellness protocol. These references describe ozone's regulatory context and the state of the published evidence; they do not establish EBO3 as a treatment for any disease, and ozone therapy is not FDA-approved. Published EBOO/ozone literature is heterogeneous, largely preliminary or uncontrolled, and mostly of low or very-low certainty.

References describe general evidence, safety, or regulatory context. They do not establish an individual benefit for any specific person, and they do not validate EBO2's proprietary clinic protocols.

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Medical Disclaimer: Information on this website is for educational purposes only and is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease. It is not a substitute for medical advice. Individual results vary. Consult a qualified healthcare provider before beginning any treatment.

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