Cellular optimization. Physician-supervised.
High-dose NAD+, glutathione, Myers cocktails, and recovery infusions. Used adjunctively for energy, focus, jet lag, post-exertion recovery, and as part of structured longevity protocols.
NAD+ is the coenzyme that sirtuins (the cellular repair enzymes) require to function and that mitochondria use to produce ATP. Tissue NAD+ levels fall steadily with age, which has prompted growing interest in restoring NAD+ as a longevity intervention.2 IV delivery bypasses gut absorption and first-pass metabolism, putting the molecule directly into circulation in pharmacologic doses.
Beyond NAD+, our IV menu includes glutathione (the master intracellular antioxidant), Myers cocktails (the classic B-complex / magnesium / vitamin C blend), and custom infusions matched to patient labs and goals. Every infusion is reviewed by Dr. Abdullah before scheduling.
Each infusion is reviewed by Dr. Abdullah before scheduling. Cadence is individualized.
Entry-level infusion. ~90 minutes with slow titration to minimize the chest-pressure / abdominal sensation common at faster rates.
Higher-dose NAD+ for established protocols. Typically 3 to 4 hours. Common in monthly maintenance after a loading series.
High-dose for experienced patients. 4 to 6 hours with careful titration. Reserved for patients who have tolerated lower doses well.
The master intracellular antioxidant. Liver support, detoxification, post-illness recovery.
Classic vitamin/mineral infusion. Hydration, B-complex, magnesium, calcium, vitamin C. 30 to 60 minutes.
Tailored infusion based on labs and goals. Built with the medical director, often layering glutathione, B12, taurine, or amino acid blends.
NAD+ at 1,000 mg given in two hours feels punishing — chest pressure, abdominal cramping, the whole picture. The same dose given over five hours feels like nothing.
We start every patient slow, ask about symptoms every 15 minutes through the first session, and slow the rate (or stop and restart) the second anything is uncomfortable.
NAD+. The most common acute sensations during infusion are mild flushing, brief chest pressure, and abdominal cramping. These are dose-rate-dependent and almost always relieved by slowing the drip. We screen for contraindications including active malignancy, severe CV disease, and significant renal impairment before scheduling high-dose infusions.
Glutathione & Myers. Generally very well tolerated. Rare: injection-site reaction, transient mild headache.
Limitations of evidence. NAD+ IV therapy has growing mechanistic support but limited randomized clinical trial evidence in healthy adults. We discuss this honestly. Patients seeking longevity-oriented protocols should understand they are participating in a category where the evidence is still maturing.

Dr. Abdullah is a board-certified internal medicine physician based in Southlake, TX, and an IFM-certified functional medicine practitioner. He focuses on men's hormone health — testosterone optimization, GLP-1 weight loss, sexual health, peptides, and longevity — and personally reviews and adjusts every protocol that leaves the clinic.
Free first visit. We'll discuss what you're optimizing for, screen for contraindications, and pick the infusion that fits.
or call (817) 749-6946