Is EBO3 / EBOO Therapy Safe?

How sessions are supervised, commonly reported effects, and who is typically not a candidate. Measured, factual, and provider-guided.

Important context

EBO3 is offered as elective wellness support at our clinic. It is not a treatment for disease. Every protocol is personalized through consultation and screening, and results vary.

How sessions are supervised

Five layers of safety

Screening before scheduling

Intake reviews your medical history, current medications and supplements, prior labs, and specific contraindications for ozone-class protocols. Your provider decides whether EBO3 is appropriate.

Sterile single-use circuits

Every session uses sterile, single-use tubing and medical-grade equipment. Reusable components are not shared between clients.

Vital-sign monitoring

Blood pressure, heart rate, and oxygen saturation are monitored throughout your session. A trained clinician is present the entire time.

Private, physician-supervised room

Sessions are delivered in a private concierge room under physician supervision — not in a shared drip lounge.

Follow-up after each visit

We check in after each session to refine cadence, adjust pairings, and confirm you tolerated the protocol well.

Side effects

What's commonly reported

Effects commonly reported with IV-based wellness therapies include mild fatigue, lightheadedness, temporary chill, and bruising or tenderness at the IV site. These are typically mild and self-limited. Anything unusual should be reported to your provider so your protocol can be adjusted or paused.

This is a general description of commonly reported effects with IV-based wellness therapies — not a complete list, and not medical advice for your specific situation.

Screening & candidacy

Who is typically not a candidate

Screening reviews conditions such as those below. Final candidacy for EBO3 or any ozone-class protocol is a clinical decision made by your provider based on your full history, current medications, and, where indicated, recent labs.

  • Pregnancy or breastfeeding
  • G6PD deficiency (specific to ozone-class protocols)
  • Certain blood or bleeding disorders, or use of high-dose anticoagulants
  • Active, unstable cardiovascular or renal disease
  • Recent significant surgery or acute infection under active treatment
  • Known hypersensitivity to elements of the protocol

When to contact a physician

Seek prompt medical care for any severe or persistent symptom — chest pain, difficulty breathing, sudden severe headache, fainting, or symptoms of an allergic reaction — after any wellness therapy. For emergencies, call 911 or go to the nearest emergency department. This page is educational and does not replace advice from your personal physician.

Safety FAQ

EBO3 & EBOO safety — common questions

Next step

Talk to a provider about candidacy

The only reliable way to know whether EBO3 is appropriate for you is a physician-guided consultation. We'll review your history, discuss screening, and recommend a path.

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