Rectal Ozone Therapy
Rectal ozone therapy at CMN Hospital is incorporated within Dr. Edgar Payán’s 28-day inpatient treatment program and is selected according to each patient’s diagnosis, physician evaluation, laboratory findings, present condition, and overall treatment plan throughout care.
Rectal insufflation is one of several ozone-based therapies integrated into coordinated inpatient care and is commonly utilized as part of supportive oxygen-based treatment planning during a patient’s stay.
Understanding Rectal Ozone Therapy
Rectal ozone insufflation has been utilized for many years within integrative and supportive medical settings as a non-invasive ozone therapy delivery method designed to support oxygen utilization, circulation, immune-related activity, and overall wellness support throughout the body.
Medical-grade ozone is administered using a small flexible catheter as part of a controlled inpatient treatment setting. Patients commonly describe the procedure as brief and generally well tolerated.
The colon contains an extensive vascular network which allows absorption into circulation, making rectal insufflation one of several commonly used ozone therapy delivery methods incorporated into supportive inpatient care.
Why Ozone Therapy Is Used
Research and physician interest involving ozone-based therapies has existed internationally for decades. Published literature has explored ozone therapy’s role involving circulation, oxygen utilization, oxidative balance, immune-related activity, and general wellness support.
Ozone therapy has been incorporated within various integrative medical settings internationally and continues to be studied for its biological effects involving oxygen metabolism and immune response mechanisms.
Because medical protocols, patient conditions, and treatment goals vary widely, ozone-based therapies are typically incorporated within individualized treatment planning and ongoing physician evaluation throughout care.
Integrated Inpatient Care
Because every patient arrives with a different diagnosis, present health condition, medical history, medications, laboratory findings, and treatment response, therapies, frequency of administration, and supportive approaches are individualized throughout care.
The inpatient hospital environment allows therapies to be coordinated and adjusted throughout treatment while patients receive ongoing physician evaluation, laboratory monitoring, supportive care, and daily inpatient supervision during their stay.

