
EBOO therapy is one of the most searched integrative treatments right now, and also one of the most misunderstood. People want to know if it actually works, what it costs, and how it compares to dialysis, a word that sometimes comes up because both involve blood being filtered outside the body.
This article answers all three questions in plain language, based on what EBOO therapy at The Remedy Room actually involves and what patients experience.
What Is EBOO Therapy?
EBOO stands for Extracorporeal Blood Oxygenation and Ozonation. It is a therapy in which a small amount of your our team draws blood out of the body through an IV line, passes it through a sterile medical-grade filtration system where oxygen and ozone enrich it, and then returns it to your body through a second IV line.
The entire process takes about 60 minutes. During that time, our medical team supervises the entire process as two to three and a half liters of blood cycle through the system. The Remedy Room uses the clinically validated Trigen system for every session.
In simple terms, EBOO therapy is a deep blood purification treatment. It removes toxins, heavy metals, and waste products from the blood while simultaneously increasing oxygen delivery to cells and activating the immune system. Patients often describe the experience as a full body reset.
Does EBOO Therapy Really Work?
This is the most important question and it deserves a straight answer.
The clinical and research literature on ozone therapy, which is the foundation of EBOO, documents meaningful effects across multiple conditions. Published studies have shown that ozone therapy at therapeutic concentrations activates the immune system, reduces oxidative stress, improves circulation, and has antimicrobial effects against bacteria, viruses, and fungi. These are not disputed findings. They are documented in peer-reviewed journals and referenced in the medical literature going back decades.
EBOO specifically, as an extracorporeal method of delivering ozone therapy, allows significantly larger volumes of blood to be treated compared to standard ozone IV methods. Where a major autohemotherapy session treats a small volume of blood at a time, EBOO processes liters of blood in a single session through a closed-loop sterile system. This is why practitioners consider it one of the most comprehensive ozone delivery methods available.
Who Responds Best to EBOO Therapy
At The Remedy Room, the patients who tend to respond most noticeably to EBOO therapy are those dealing with:
- Chronic inflammation that has not responded to other treatments
- Persistent infections, biofilm buildup, or immune dysfunction
- Toxin overload from heavy metals, mold, or environmental exposure
- Post-viral fatigue and long COVID symptoms
- Autoimmune conditions and sluggish detox pathways
- Poor circulation and chronic fatigue
In practice, many patients report sharper mental clarity, improved energy, better circulation, and clearer skin within hours of their first session. These effects tend to deepen over the course of the initial three-session protocol.
However, it is worth being honest about what EBOO therapy is not. It is not a cure for any specific disease. It is a systemic support therapy that improves the body’s internal environment, reduces toxic burden, and activates the immune and repair systems. For this reason, patients whose health challenges are rooted in chronic inflammation, toxin accumulation, or immune dysfunction, that kind of systemic reset can produce significant and lasting improvements.
Hear From Our Patients
The best way to understand what EBOO therapy feels like is to hear it directly from patients who have experienced it at The Remedy Room in New Orleans.
EBOO Therapy vs Dialysis: What Is the Difference?
This comparison comes up regularly because both dialysis and EBOO involve blood being processed outside the body. But beyond that surface similarity, they are completely different therapies used for completely different purposes.
What Dialysis Is For
Dialysis is a life-sustaining medical procedure for patients whose kidneys have failed or are severely impaired. The kidneys are responsible for filtering waste products and excess fluid from the blood. When they can no longer do this, dialysis takes over that function mechanically. Without dialysis, patients with kidney failure cannot survive.
Dialysis is not a wellness therapy. It is a medical necessity for a specific organ failure condition. Patients typically require it multiple times per week, often for years or for the rest of their lives.
What EBOO Therapy Is For
EBOO therapy is an integrative wellness and detoxification therapy for patients who have functioning kidneys and organs but whose internal environment has become burdened by toxins, chronic inflammation, immune dysfunction, or persistent illness.
Importantly, the goal is not to replace organ function. The goal is to clean and optimize the blood, increase oxygen delivery to cells, activate the immune system, and reduce the toxic and inflammatory burden that is preventing the body from healing and functioning at its best.
As a result, EBOO therapy is appropriate for healthy adults who want deep systemic support. In short, it is not a treatment for kidney failure or organ disease.
The Key Differences at a Glance
Dialysis removes waste because the kidneys cannot. EBOO therapy supports the blood because the body’s detox and immune systems need reinforcement. Dialysis is a permanent medical treatment for organ failure. EBOO therapy is a periodic wellness protocol for systemic optimization. Dialysis patients need it to survive. EBOO patients choose it to thrive.
In summary, the reason they are sometimes mentioned together is simply that both involve extracorporeal blood processing. The clinical purposes, the patient populations, and the outcomes are entirely different.
How Much Does EBOO Therapy Cost?
All new patients begin with a required consultation and lab review at $299. This ensures your provider confirms the therapy is safe and appropriate for your situation before your first session.
Individual sessions are $1,599 each. Most patients choose the 3-session package at $3,499, which saves 15 percent and covers the foundational protocol of one session per week for three consecutive weeks.
It is important to understand that insurance does not cover the cost of EBOO therapy. However HSA and FSA cards are accepted, and CareCredit financing is available for patients who need it.
What to Expect at Your First EBOO Session
Your first visit begins with a brief check-in and health review. Our team places two small IV lines, one in each arm, one to draw blood out and one to return it. You will be seated comfortably for approximately 60 minutes while your blood cycles through the Trigen system.
Most patients find the session relaxing. You can rest, read, or simply sit quietly while the treatment runs. A trained provider monitors your vitals and the system throughout. There is no downtime afterward and most patients return to normal activities the same day.
Additionally, some patients notice mild detox symptoms in the hours following their first session, a temporary response as the body begins clearing the toxins that have been released. This is normal and typically resolves quickly. Staying well hydrated after your session supports the clearance process.
What the Published Research Says About EBOO Therapy
EBOO therapy is backed by peer-reviewed research going back to 1990. Key published studies document its clinical validity across multiple conditions including peripheral artery disease, immune dysfunction, chronic degenerative conditions, and severe infection. Researchers have consistently found EBOO to be well tolerated, without significant side effects, and effective through its action on immune and endothelial cells during blood ozonation.
For a full overview of the published research, visit The Remedy Room research page or review the primary studies directly on PubMed.
EBOO Therapy at The Remedy Room in Louisiana
At The Remedy Room in Old Metairie, Louisiana, Dr. Mignonne Mary and her team have administered EBOO therapy to thousands of patients across the state. As one of the few physician-led clinics in Louisiana offering this level of integrative blood therapy, The Remedy Room has built a depth of clinical experience with EBOO that is difficult to find anywhere else in Louisiana. Every session is supervised by a medical provider, never delegated to non-clinical staff, and every patient protocol is built around their individual health history and goals.
As a result, patients travel to The Remedy Room from Baton Rouge, Lafayette, Shreveport, the North Shore, and across Louisiana for EBOO therapy. For those coming from further afield, New Orleans is easily accessible by car and by air through Louis Armstrong International Airport.
Is EBOO Therapy Right for You?
EBOO therapy tends to be most appropriate for patients who feel that their body is stuck, carrying a burden of toxins, inflammation, or immune dysfunction that other approaches have not been able to fully address. It is also used by patients who simply want the deepest available systemic reset as part of a proactive approach to long-term health.
A consultation at The Remedy Room is where that conversation starts. Your provider reviews your health history, your current symptoms, and your goals, and gives you an honest assessment of whether EBOO therapy is the right next step for you.
Learn More About EBOO Therapy at The Remedy Room
Book Your EBOO Consultation — $299
theremedyroom.com | 504-301-1670 | 123 Metairie Rd., Old Metairie, LA 70005



