Hyperbaric PLUS 2
- Laser Therapy (LLLT)
- Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT)
- Oxygen Therapy
- Cryotherapy
- Migraine Treatment
Mesa, AZ
Mesa has built a substantial retiree and active-senior population across Leisure World, Sunland Village, and Las Sendas, which drives steady demand for wound-care HBOT and post-stroke recovery protocols. The city also sits under the East Valley aerospace corridor near Mesa Gateway Airport, creating a small but real altitude-training and pilot-recovery niche. Banner Baywood Medical Center and Banner Desert anchor the hospital-based hyperbaric referral stream for diabetic wounds and radiation injury.
The clinics listed in Mesa on Regenerated.com span the full range from 1.3 ATA mild hyperbaric chambers in medspas and recovery studios to medical-grade 2.0 to 2.4 ATA HBOT with physician oversight. The FDA and the Undersea and Hyperbaric Medical Society recognize 14 approved indications, non-healing wounds, carbon monoxide poisoning, radiation injury, decompression sickness, and others. Outside those indications, Mesa clinics market HBOT for long COVID, traumatic brain injury, and cognitive support on an off-label cash-pay basis. Arizona naturopathic physicians can supervise off-label hyperbaric protocols within scope. UHMS accreditation is the clearest signal of clinical rigor when comparing local providers.
Regulatory context
FDA clears hyperbaric chambers as Class II medical devices under 21 CFR 878.5550. FDA has approved hyperbaric oxygen therapy for 14 specific indications aligned with the Undersea and Hyperbaric Medical Society (UHMS). Use for those indications is evidence-based and generally covered by Medicare and commercial insurance when documentation supports medical necessity. Any use outside the 14 approved indications is considered off-label and is not FDA-approved. FDA issued consumer updates in 2013 and again in 2021 warning patients and providers against marketing HBOT for unapproved conditions such as autism, cancer, Alzheimer disease, and long COVID.
The Arizona Medical Board has disciplined licensees for misleading advertising of unproven therapies, which can include off-label HBOT marketing. Facility safety is enforced through adoption of NFPA 99 Chapter 14 by local fire marshals and the Arizona Department of Health Services for licensed healthcare facilities. CMS contractors Noridian adjudicate Medicare HBOT claims in Arizona and have issued overpayment demands where documentation did not support one of the 14 covered indications. The Arizona Attorney General Consumer Protection unit has authority under A.R.S. 44-1522 over deceptive health claims.