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Clinics in Sacramento, California

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Sacramento, CA

Chelation Therapy clinics in Sacramento

Sacramento anchors the state capital region and sits at the junction of Central Valley agriculture and Sierra Nevada mining history. Local chelation demand has a distinct regional signature, agricultural arsenic exposure from Valley well water, legacy mercury deposits in Sierra rivers from 19th century gold mining, and lead in older Midtown and East Sacramento housing. The California Department of Public Health maintains the Mercury in Fish and Mining Areas guidance that local integrative providers often reference during intake.

4 Sacramento clinics in this directory offer chelation therapy, drawing on California-licensed MDs, DOs, and naturopathic doctors working within their A2Z integrative scope. Common agents include calcium disodium EDTA, DMPS, DMSA, and deferoxamine, matched to the metal confirmed on provocation or baseline testing. Protocols span 10-session detox courses and longer 30-session cardiovascular series modeled on the TACT trial. Pricing is almost entirely cash-pay, with UC Davis Health providing backup hospital-based chelation for confirmed poisoning cases. Regenerated.com does not recommend chelation for autism or cardiovascular disease outside clinical trials, and emphasizes that off-label chelation has caused fatal hypocalcemia.

4 Clinics

MD on staff

Harbor Medical Clinic and Wellness Center

Sacramento, CA

Harbor Medical Clinic and Wellness Center, a regenerative-medicine practice in Newport Beach, specializes in platelet-rich plasma therapy and regenerative-injection protocols for musculoskeletal and …

  • PRP Therapy
  • IV Therapy
  • Arthritis Treatment
  • Chelation Therapy
  • Red Light Therapy

HydraVive Wellness

Sacramento, CA

HydraVive Wellness, an IV therapy clinic in Sacramento, offers personalized infusion protocols including NAD+ therapy, ozone therapy, and custom IV cocktails designed for energy, recovery, and longev…

  • NAD IV Therapy
  • Vitamin IV Therapy
  • PRP Therapy
  • Ozone Therapy
  • IV Therapy

Sacramento Naturopathic Medical Center

Sacramento, CA

Sacramento Naturopathic Medical Center, a naturopathic-medicine clinic in Sacramento, specializes in hormone optimization and regenerative therapies for patients pursuing longevity and functional res…

  • Vitamin IV Therapy
  • PRP Therapy
  • Ozone Therapy
  • Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT)
  • Chelation Therapy

Health Associates Medical Group

Sacramento, CA

Health Associates Medical Group, a functional and integrative-medicine clinic in Sacramento, specializes in prolotherapy and chelation therapy alongside comprehensive lab testing and functional-medic…

  • IV Therapy
  • Chelation Therapy
  • Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT)
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Regulatory context

A note on California's chelation therapy rules.

The FDA has approved a narrow set of chelating agents for specific heavy metal toxicities. Calcium disodium edetate (CaNa2EDTA, Versenate) is approved for symptomatic lead poisoning, succimer (Chemet, DMSA) for pediatric lead poisoning at blood lead levels above 45 mcg/dL, deferoxamine (Desferal) and deferasirox (Exjade) for chronic iron overload, and dimercaprol (BAL) for arsenic, gold, and acute lead poisoning. Use of EDTA chelation for cardiovascular disease was studied in the NIH-funded TACT trial (2013) with controversial findings and remains not FDA-approved for that indication. Chelation for autism spectrum disorder is not evidence-based and has been linked to pediatric deaths. The FDA issued a 2010 sweep of warning letters to compounders marketing OTC chelation products with unapproved disease claims.

  • California Medical Practice Act, Business and Professions Code Section 2052
    Only physicians licensed by the Medical Board of California may diagnose and treat, including prescribing chelating agents.
  • California Naturopathic Doctors Act, Business and Professions Code Section 3613
    California-licensed NDs have a defined scope that includes some IV therapies under physician supervision.

The Medical Board of California has disciplined physicians for marketing chelation as a treatment for autism, atherosclerosis, and Alzheimer's disease without adequate informed consent or evidence base. California Department of Public Health has investigated clinics for unsanitary IV practices. The Pittsburgh 2005 pediatric autism chelation death prompted California medical board guidance reinforcing that the wrong EDTA salt (Na2EDTA versus CaNa2EDTA) can be fatal. Compounded DMPS distribution has drawn scrutiny under California pharmacy law.

Chelation Therapy in Sacramento, answered.

EDTA IV sessions run 150 to 400 dollars per session. DMPS and DMSA protocols, oral or IV, cost 200 to 500 dollars per session. A standard 10-session detox course runs 1,500 to 4,000 dollars. The longer 30-session TACT-style cardiovascular protocol, which is not FDA-approved, runs 4,500 to 12,000 dollars including labs and supplements. Insurance covers chelation only for confirmed lead, mercury, or iron poisoning using FDA-approved agents at appropriate facilities.

The FDA has approved calcium disodium EDTA, DMSA, and deferoxamine for specific heavy metal poisoning diagnoses, lead, mercury, iron overload. Chelation for cardiovascular disease has not been FDA-approved. The 2013 TACT trial suggested possible benefit in diabetic post-MI patients, but the FDA has not approved chelation for any cardiovascular indication. Chelation is not FDA-approved for autism, and major pediatric and autism research organizations specifically advise against it.

Providers in Sacramento are typically MDs or DOs with American College for Advancement in Medicine, ACAM, training. Naturopathic doctors may offer chelation within their state-specific scope, which varies significantly. Verify the provider is licensed, insured, and uses the correct EDTA form. Calcium disodium EDTA is the standard. Disodium EDTA, the wrong form, has caused fatal hypocalcemia and is specifically warned against by the FDA for chelation use.

Chelation can be dangerous if misused. In 2005, a five-year-old autistic child in Pittsburgh died from hypocalcemia after receiving the wrong EDTA form. The FDA has issued specific warnings about disodium EDTA, Na2EDTA, versus calcium disodium EDTA. Risks include electrolyte disturbance, kidney stress, and reactions to mobilized metals. Chelation for autism is not supported by evidence and is considered unsafe by pediatric authorities. Proper testing, correct agent, and monitoring reduce risk substantially.

Verify the provider is a licensed MD, DO, or in-scope ND with documented chelation training, ACAM is the most common credential. Insist on heavy metal testing before starting a protocol, ideally baseline urine or blood plus a provocation test. Confirm the clinic uses calcium disodium EDTA or appropriate agents, not disodium EDTA. Ask for realistic framing. Chelation for cardiovascular disease or autism is not FDA-approved and should include informed consent that makes the non-approval explicit.

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