Zinc shows up on every immune-boost IV menu in Cabo. The marketing leans hard on “boosts your immune system.” The clinical reality is more specific and more useful. Here’s what zinc IV actually does, and where the evidence supports it.
What zinc does in the body
Zinc is an essential trace mineral involved in DNA synthesis, protein production, wound healing, immune-cell function (particularly T-cell development and natural killer cell activity), and the senses of taste and smell. The average adult body contains about 2–3 grams of zinc, mostly in muscle and bone, with a small daily turnover.
What the evidence actually shows
1. Reducing duration of the common cold
Multiple meta-analyses suggest oral zinc lozenges (taken within 24 hours of symptom onset) shorten cold duration by about a day. The data on IV zinc for the same purpose is thin — most cold studies use oral zinc.
2. Wound healing
Zinc deficiency impairs wound healing. Replacement (oral or IV when oral isn’t possible) restores it. Healthy, well-nourished travelers rarely need IV zinc for this reason.
3. Immune support in zinc-deficient patients
Zinc deficiency does impair immune function — particularly in elderly, malnourished, or chronically ill patients. Replacement helps. The implication for vacation IV: useful if you’re actually deficient (rare in well-nourished US/Canadian travelers), modest if you aren’t.
4. Reducing pneumonia and diarrhea in children
WHO recommends oral zinc supplementation for acute diarrhea in children in low-resource settings. Routine IV zinc for tourists doesn’t apply here.
Where the marketing claims overshoot
- “Boosts your immune system” in a healthy adult — modest effect at best.
- “Prevents COVID” — no robust evidence for IV zinc preventing or treating COVID specifically.
- “Detoxifies” — no mechanism for this.
- “Anti-aging” — no clinical evidence.
How we use zinc at Cabo Quick Care
Zinc is a standard add-on in our Immune Boost IV ($159), often alongside vitamin C and B-complex. The physician chooses the dose. Standalone IV zinc requests are uncommon; it’s usually part of a combination drip.
Dose and infusion
Typical clinical IV zinc dose is 5–10 mg added to a base infusion. Higher doses are reserved for confirmed deficiency or specific clinical scenarios. Infused over 30+ minutes — fast infusion causes nausea.
Who should be careful with IV zinc
- Pregnancy — moderate doses appear safe; high doses are not recommended.
- Kidney impairment — adjust dose.
- On copper supplementation — chronic high-dose zinc lowers copper levels.
- Active GI bleeding or recent ulcer — caution with the wider drip components.
Side effects
- Nausea if infused too quickly (the rate is slowed).
- Metallic taste during infusion.
- Rarely: allergic reaction.
The honest summary
Zinc IV is a reasonable adjunct to immune-supportive IV therapy, particularly if you’re starting to feel a cold coming on. It’s not magic, and it’s not a substitute for sleep, hydration, and time. The Immune Boost drip in our menu is best understood as a supportive intervention — it helps with and supports immune function; it does not “cure,” “prevent,” or “boost” beyond what your underlying nutrition can do.
Related reading
For broader IV-and-immunity context see our IV for flu and fever post and our cold and flu on vacation guide.
Frequently asked questions
Does zinc IV prevent me from getting sick on the cruise?
Not reliably. Hand-washing, masking in crowded indoor spaces, and avoiding obviously sick travelers do more.
Should I get a zinc IV if I’m already sick?
It can be part of a supportive drip if you’re feeling early symptoms. Won’t cut a full infection short by itself.
How is IV zinc different from oral zinc lozenges?
Oral zinc has more evidence for cold-duration shortening; IV is faster but the data is thin specifically for cold prevention.
How much does a Zinc/Immune IV cost?
Our Immune Boost is $159, including zinc, vitamin C, B-complex, and fluids.
Book an Immune IV in Cabo · Call +52 1 624 409 5065 · WhatsApp
Educational, not medical advice. COFEPRIS-licensed clinic.