Skip to content
Homepage
Clinic directory

Clinics in Denver, North Carolina

Every listing is checked against federal records, reviewed for evidence, and confirmed still operating. No pay-to-play. No guesswork.

  • No results found.
  • No results found.

Denver, NC

IV Therapy clinics in Denver

Denver's IV therapy market is heavily defined by altitude. At 5,280 feet, visitors arriving from sea level frequently experience mild dehydration and altitude-related symptoms in their first 24 to 48 hours, and mobile IV services have built a real business meeting them at hotels in LoDo, RiNo, and around Union Station. Clinics cluster in Cherry Creek, Highlands, RiNo, Wash Park, and DTC, with suburban growth in Centennial, Greenwood Village, Englewood, and Lone Tree. UCHealth, Presbyterian St. Luke's, and the HCA HealthONE network supply many medical directors. Colorado is a full-practice state for nurse practitioners, so NP-led clinics are common alongside physician director models. The city's serious endurance athlete population (Bolder Boulder, Colfax Marathon, Leadville training) sustains year-round athletic recovery demand, and ski-season traffic pushes hydration and recovery volume at clinics serving I-70 travelers heading to Vail, Breck, and Aspen.

1 Clinics

LKN Drip

Denver, NC

LKN Drip, an IV therapy clinic in Denver, specializes in intravenous nutrient protocols including IV Hydration, Vitamin IV, and NAD IV Therapy. The practice positions itself as a concierge offering f…

  • NAD IV Therapy
  • Vitamin IV Therapy
  • IV Therapy
  • IV Hydration
  • Migraine Treatment
15 30 50 results per page

Regulatory context

A note on North Carolina's iv therapy rules.

FDA regulates the compounded ingredients used in IV therapy and the facilities that prepare them. Patient-specific compounded IVs fall under FDCA Section 503A, while bulk preparations for office use fall under Section 503B (outsourcing facilities). USP Chapter 797 governs sterile compounding standards. FDA has issued warnings about injectable glutathione marketed for skin lightening (2017) and has not approved NAD IV for any specific indication. Vitamin and mineral IV mixtures such as the Myers cocktail are compounded preparations and are not FDA-approved drug products.

  • North Carolina Nurse Practice Act (N.C.G.S. Ch. 90, Art. 9A)
    Defines RN scope including IV insertion and administration under a valid order from a physician or APRN.
  • North Carolina Medical Board delegation rules (21 NCAC 32M)
    Governs physician delegation of IV therapy through standing orders and medical director arrangements.

The North Carolina medical and nursing boards have addressed unlicensed practice in medical spa and IV lounge settings. Common enforcement themes include IV therapy administered without a valid physician order, stale or missing standing orders, absence of a designated medical director, and unlicensed personnel performing venipuncture. Boards have reiterated that a prescribing physician or APRN must establish a bona fide patient relationship before any IV protocol is initiated, and that standing orders must be specific, dated, and periodically reviewed.

IV Therapy in Denver, answered.

Denver sits in the standard-to-premium metro tier. A Myers' Cocktail typically runs $140 to $225, immune and hydration blends $165 to $275, and NAD+ protocols $375 to $750 depending on dose. Glutathione add-ons average $50 to $100. Mobile IV services delivering to LoDo, Cherry Creek, or DTC usually add a $40 to $90 travel fee, with premium pricing for ski-bound clients heading to the mountains. Memberships bundle monthly sessions at 20 to 30 percent off single-visit pricing.

Colorado is a full-practice state for qualified nurse practitioners, meaning NPs can evaluate and prescribe independently. Many Denver IV clinics are NP-led, while others run a physician medical director model with RNs administering under standing orders. You will complete an intake and brief screening on your first visit, with a consult for NAD+ or high-dose vitamin C. The Colorado State Board of Nursing and Medical Board oversee scope and licensure.

Colorado sterile IV compounding falls under the State Board of Pharmacy, with USP 797 as the technical standard. The FDA flagged compounded injectable glutathione in 2017 and continues to treat NAD+ as investigational. Reputable Denver clinics disclose their 503A or 503B compounding source, maintain emergency protocols, and document informed consent. Altitude-specific protocols should still be grounded in individual screening, not just a blanket hotel-room drip.

Altitude-related dehydration and adjustment symptoms drive a meaningful share of Denver IV bookings, especially from sea-level visitors in their first 48 hours. Endurance athlete recovery (Bolder Boulder, Colfax Marathon, Leadville training), ski trip recovery, immune support, hangover relief, and NAD+ for energy round out demand. IV therapy is not a treatment for serious illness. IVIG, chemotherapy, and therapeutic iron infusions belong at UCHealth or Presbyterian St. Luke's infusion centers.

Verify the RN's license through the Colorado Department of Regulatory Agencies lookup, and confirm the prescribing provider's NPI on NPPES. Ask which 503A compounding pharmacy supplies IV bags and whether they follow USP 797. Request the standing order protocol and consent form. Avoid mobile operators arriving at ski lodges without visible credentials, or clinics that cannot name a prescribing provider.

Filters

Rating

Treatments

Advanced Therapies
Chronic, Immune & Hormonal
Digestive & Respiratory
IV & Infusion 1
Pain & Musculoskeletal
Skin & Aesthetics
Mental Health & Neurology