EBOO Therapy: The Complete Guide to Extracorporeal Blood Ozonation
Curevo Medical Team · Clinical Editorial8 min readMay 15, 2026
Extracorporeal Blood Oxygenation and Ozonation (EBOO) is one of the most advanced blood purification therapies available today. Unlike traditional ozone therapies, EBOO processes large volumes of blood — typically 3 to 5 litres — outside the body through a closed-loop dialysis-style system, infusing medical-grade ozone and oxygen before returning it. The result is a deep, systemic detoxification that goes far beyond what earlier IV ozone techniques could achieve.
The procedure itself takes 60 to 90 minutes. A nurse establishes two IV lines — one draws blood from the body, another returns it. The blood passes through a specialised ozone-resistant chamber where it is exposed to a precise ozone/oxygen mixture calibrated to the patient's condition. Because the system is entirely closed, there is no risk of air embolism, a concern with older ozone delivery methods.
EBOO is being used across a wide range of conditions. Chronic fatigue syndrome and Lyme disease patients report significant improvements in energy and cognitive clarity after a course of 6 to 10 sessions. Autoimmune conditions including lupus and fibromyalgia show measurable biomarker improvement. In anti-aging medicine, EBOO is used as a proactive intervention — reducing systemic inflammation, improving mitochondrial function, and boosting NAD+ recycling pathways.
Cost varies significantly by geography. In India, a single EBOO session runs between ₹15,000 and ₹30,000 (approximately $180–$360 USD). Germany and Switzerland charge €400–€700 per session. In the United States, where EBOO remains largely outside mainstream insurance coverage, costs reach $800–$1,200. For a typical 8-session protocol, India offers the most compelling value — with the same German-engineered equipment, operated by equally trained staff.
Choosing the right provider is critical. EBOO equipment must be certified medical-grade (Herrmann ozone generators or equivalent). The clinic should hold ISO 9001 certification at minimum; JCI or NABH accreditation is preferable. Practitioners should be trained physicians, not aestheticians or wellness coaches. Ask specifically whether the ozone concentration is measured in μg/mL and calibrated per session — clinics that cannot answer this should be avoided.
Curevo operates the world's largest verified EBOO network, with vetted providers in India, Germany, Turkey, Thailand, and the UAE. Every clinic in our network has passed a 47-point clinical audit. Patients can request a free quote, review provider credentials, and book a video consultation with the treating physician before committing to travel.
Side effects are generally mild — a slight metallic taste during treatment, occasional lightheadedness in the first session, and temporary fatigue in the 12–24 hours following treatment as the body processes the detoxification response. Contraindications include G6PD deficiency, uncontrolled hyperthyroidism, active haemorrhage, and recent thromboembolism. A pre-treatment blood panel is mandatory at every reputable clinic.
EBOO is not a cure. It is a powerful adjunct therapy that amplifies the body's own healing mechanisms. Used alongside evidence-based treatment protocols, it can accelerate recovery, reduce inflammatory burden, and restore a level of vitality that many patients had given up hope of finding.
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