From a Scrape to a Flight Home — One Number

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A long flight into Cabo dries you out more than most travelers expect. Cabin air at cruise altitude runs around 10–20% humidity (the Sahara is around 25%); blood-oxygen saturation drops a few points; circulation slows; sodium-heavy snacks compound the loss. If you’re connecting through Denver, Mexico City, or any other high-elevation city before landing in SJD, the recovery curve gets steeper. A medical IV on arrival day shortens it.

What flying does to your body

  • Dehydration — most adults lose 1–2 liters of water on a 5-hour flight just to humidification.
  • Mild hypoxia — cabin pressure is equivalent to ~6,000–8,000 feet of altitude. Healthy adults compensate, but mild headache and fatigue are common.
  • Circadian disruption — even a 2-hour time-zone shift affects sleep, cortisol, melatonin, and gut motility.
  • Reduced circulation — sitting in a cramped seat for hours; swelling, stiffness, occasional venous risk.
  • Sodium loading — airport food, in-flight pretzels, salted nuts; everything dries you out further.

Why high-altitude layovers compound the effect

Layovers in Mexico City (~7,200 ft), Denver (~5,200 ft), Salt Lake (~4,200 ft) or Bogotá (~8,600 ft) add a real altitude hit on top of the flight. Most people feel okay for a few hours and then crash — headache, mild nausea, breathlessness, poor sleep. Coming back down to Cabo’s sea level helps, but the cumulative dehydration and electrolyte drift takes 24–48 hours to fully reverse without help.

What a post-flight medical IV includes

At Cabo Walk-In Clinic the standard recovery IV adds:

  • 1 liter of normal saline or lactated Ringer’s — the volume your cabin time has cost you.
  • Magnesium and B-complex — replaces what altitude and dry air have pulled down; helps the headache.
  • Vitamin C — antioxidant load after the oxidative stress of high-altitude exposure.
  • Optional add-ons: Zofran if you’re nauseous, Toradol for headache, electrolyte boost if you’ve been salt-heavy.
  • Physician supervision and a brief intake to confirm there’s no other reason behind your fatigue.

This is similar in spirit to our jet lag & post-flight IV page; the post on jet lag specifically covers the circadian side, and our travel fatigue IV page is for the post-flight slump.

When the symptoms aren’t just travel fatigue

Sometimes the headache and fatigue you blame on the flight are pointing somewhere else:

  • If your headache is unusually severe or has neurological symptoms — see a doctor.
  • If you have chest pain, calf swelling, or sudden shortness of breath after a long flight — rule out pulmonary embolism or DVT urgently. Emergency care applies.
  • If you’re not urinating despite drinking — significant dehydration; come in or call us.

Best time to schedule the IV

Within 4–8 hours of landing is ideal — early enough to recover for dinner and your first full day, late enough that you’ve had time to settle into your hotel. Mobile to your room works well for arrival-day patients who don’t want to leave the hotel.

Pricing

Post-flight recovery IV: $149–$179 at Cabo Walk-In Clinic, including the doctor review. Mobile dispatch covers Cabo, the corridor, and San José del Cabo (closer to the airport).

Things to also do

  • Keep drinking water through the rest of the day.
  • Eat a real meal — protein, vegetables, some carbohydrate.
  • Skip alcohol on arrival day if you can. Replace it on day 2.
  • Walk to reset circulation; nap briefly if needed but try to align with Cabo’s clock.
  • Sunscreen for tomorrow.

Frequently asked questions

Is post-flight IV the same as a jet-lag IV?

Similar but not identical — post-flight focuses on hydration and oxidative stress recovery; jet-lag IV adds emphasis on circadian symptoms.

Can I get the IV before my first dinner?

Yes — book it within a few hours of landing.

Where can I get it near SJD airport?

See our doctor near SJD airport page for service in the immediate airport zone.

Will it help if I have chronic altitude sickness from layovers?

Partly — fluids and B-complex help recovery; underlying altitude sensitivity is a separate issue your home doctor should manage.

Book a post-flight IV · Call +52 1 624 409 5065 · WhatsApp

Educational, not medical advice. COFEPRIS-licensed clinic. For chest pain, leg swelling, or shortness of breath after flying call 911 (or 066 in Mexico).

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CABO + WALK-IN CLINIC
Travel Health Guide Call +52 (624) 409 5065 WhatsApp 24/7
COFEPRIS-licensed · Cabo San Lucas
Open 9:00 AM – 10:00 PM daily