Infusion Therapy at ANOVA:
Individually Planned Infusion Programmes for Our Patients

 

Looking after your health is a commitment worth making. Infusion therapy is a way of administering fluids, vitamins, nutrients or other substances directly into the bloodstream. At ANOVA, infusion therapy may be considered alongside an existing treatment or as a separate programme, depending on your individual medical situation. Whether an infusion therapy is medically appropriate for you, and what it would contain, is decided by your treating physician after an individual assessment. If you would like to know more, get in touch with us to arrange a consultation.

Be Your Healthiest Self:
Choose what feels right from ANOVA’s Infusion Therapy Menu

anti aging

Anti-Aging

immune boost

Immune Boost

wellbeing programm

Wellbeing Program

athlets program

Athlete’s Program

neurodegenerative diseases

Neurodegenerative Diseases

arthritis

Arthritis

 

Explore All Infusion Therapy Options

 

Infusion schemes at ANOVA are planned individually and may extend over one to five days. Which substances are used, in which combination and over which period, is determined by the treating physician on the basis of an individual medical assessment and is discussed with you in a personal consultation. Not every infusion is suitable for every patient, and infusion therapy is not selected from a menu.

Infusion therapy may also be given alongside our Stem Cell Secretome treatment. Secretome-based approaches are the subject of laboratory and early clinical research; a therapeutic benefit from combining infusion therapy with secretome treatment has not been established.

Contraindications

Our stem cell treatments are experimental, but we only treat patients for whom we believe the risk/benefit ratio indicates treatment based on the state of the art, i.e., medical, scientific evidence.

Please understand that we therefore do not treat patients for whom the following points apply:

  • Active cancer in the last two years
  • Not yet of legal age
  • Existing pregnancy or lactation period
  • Unable to breathe on own, ventilator
  • Difficulty breathing in supine position
  • Dysphagia (extreme difficulty swallowing)
  • Psychiatric disorder
  • Active infectious disease (Hepatitis A, B, C, HIV, Syphilis, or other)