NexGen Health
- NAD IV Therapy
- Vitamin IV Therapy
- Ozone Therapy
- IV Therapy
- Laser Therapy (LLLT)
San Jose, CA
San Jose's red light therapy market is shaped by Silicon Valley tech-industry longevity spending. Willow Glen wellness studios, Santana Row medspas, and Rose Garden integrative medicine practices run full-body LED panels. Stanford Health and Kaiser dermatologists supervise medical-grade PBM, and the tech-worker demographic supports biohacking studios stacked with cold plunge, sauna, and IV.
Regulatory context
The "other" category is a catchall for regenerative wellness modalities with inconsistent federal oversight. Red light therapy devices (photobiomodulation) have narrow FDA 510(k) clearances for acne, muscle pain, and wound healing, not systemic regeneration. Whole-body cryotherapy is NOT FDA-approved for any medical indication and received an FDA safety communication in July 2016 warning of asphyxiation, frostbite, and burn risks. Ozone therapy is NOT FDA-approved for any medical use and the FDA has stated ozone is a toxic gas with no known useful medical application. Condition-specific regenerative offerings (hair restoration with minoxidil or finasteride, ED care beyond PDE5 inhibitors and shockwave) have varying approval depending on route and drug source.
California is among the strictest enforcement states. The Medical Board of California has issued public advisories and taken disciplinary action against medical spas for corporate practice of medicine violations, unsupervised RN injections, and false advertising of unapproved therapies. Ozone therapy is heavily scrutinized and clinics making cancer or infection treatment claims risk board discipline and Attorney General consumer protection action. The California Department of Public Health and local health departments also investigate facility and infection control issues at wellness clinics.