From first click to last drop — how a session runs.
No mystery. No wait. Same protocol whether you walk in or we drive over.
Booked, screened, dripped, sent home.
The same five steps run for every visit — clinic or mobile, drip or shot. We do not improvise the safety protocol.
Book in 5 minutes
Web form, call, or text. Pick a drip, a time and a location. Same-day slots most days; mobile dispatched 24/7.
Pre-screen intake
A 3-minute questionnaire — allergies, meds, recent procedures, pregnancy status. Reviewed by the on-call Medical Director before any drip ships.
Arrive & settle
In studio: warm linens, low light, blanket, beverage. Mobile: we set up wherever you are most relaxed — bedroom, couch, hotel suite.
IV placement & drip
ER-trained RN places the IV. Vitals at start, mid-drip and end. You scroll, sleep, work or talk — your choice.
After-care & follow-up
Removed, bandaged, hydrated. Text follow-up next day. If on a plan: refill scheduled before you go.
A few small things we wish more clinics told you.
These are the calls our concierge nurses get most often — usually three hours before the appointment. Save yourself the text and the worry.
- Eat something light an hour before (toast, fruit, yogurt) to avoid lightheadedness
- Hydrate normally. No need to chug water — that is what the drip is for
- Wear something with sleeves that roll up easily, or short sleeves
- Skip heavy caffeine right before (it can spike vasodilation feelings)
- Tell us about every medication you take, even supplements
- If you bruise easily, mention it — we adjust placement technique
Honest after-care — not a script.
Most clients feel a noticeable shift within 24 hours. NAD+ patients sometimes feel it next morning, sometimes day three. Here is what to actually expect.
- First 2 hours: mild flushing or warmth is normal
- Same day: increased urination is normal (you are well-hydrated)
- Next 24h: most clients report energy, mental clarity and improved sleep
- Day 2–3: peak benefits — schedule important workouts, meetings or travel
- Bruising at the IV site: small, usually fades in 3–5 days
- When to call us: any swelling, redness or persistent pain at the site
What clients say about the process.
"I was nervous about the needle. The nurse talked me through the whole thing in Spanish, found my vein on the first try, and made me laugh. It was nothing."
"The intake was actually thorough. I have done IVs at three other places and this was the first time anyone asked about my blood pressure meds."
The questions we get every week.
No fasting needed. We recommend eating something light (a snack, fruit, toast) in the hour before your appointment — empty stomach + vasodilation can cause a brief light-headed feeling. Drink water as you would normally.
Vitamin injections: ~5 minutes. Standard IV drips: 30–45 minutes. NAD+ infusions: 60–90 minutes (NAD+ runs slow on purpose).
Yes. The drip arm needs to stay still — we set up your dominant hand free where possible. Laptop, phone, book, Netflix — all fine.
You feel a quick pinch from the IV catheter — about the same as a blood draw. After that, no pain. If you have small or hard-to-find veins, tell us at intake; we have ultrasound assistance for trickier placements.
We remove the catheter, apply a small bandage, run a final 60-second check, and you go. We send a follow-up text 12–24 hours later. If you booked a refill plan, we will schedule your next slot.
Yes — though we recommend giving your body a few hours. The drip is doing its work in the background; layering alcohol over a Myers Cocktail negates some of the benefit.
Have a question we did not cover?
Ask us directlyReady when you are.
Walk into the Pearland studio, or have us drive over. The five steps are the same.