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Las Vegas, WY

Chelation Therapy clinics in Las Vegas

Chelation therapy in Las Vegas is offered by a small set of integrative and naturopathic clinics, typically for documented heavy metal toxicity. Referral and testing pathways often interact with Sunrise Hospital, UMC of Southern Nevada, and HCA Mountain View when lab confirmation is needed. Local demand is shaped by a hospitality-industry and transient adult population, and clinics vary in whether they push short detox courses or longer TACT-modeled cardiovascular protocols.

FDA-approved agents for specific poisoning diagnoses include calcium disodium EDTA, DMSA, and deferoxamine. Chelation for cardiovascular disease or autism is not FDA-approved and has caused deaths when the wrong EDTA form is used. Nevada's permissive medical spa and compounding pharmacy environment shapes which providers can deliver chelation and under what supervision.

With verified chelation clinics on Regenerated.com in Las Vegas, Nevada, patients can compare provider credentials, testing protocols, and whether the clinic uses calcium disodium EDTA (the correct form) or the dangerous disodium EDTA. ACAM-trained MDs with documented pre-treatment heavy metal testing are the minimum bar.

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Chelation Therapy in Las Vegas, 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 Las Vegas 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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