Most patients leave an IV visit feeling better than they came in, but a few things — flushing, a metallic taste, mild bruising at the site — are common enough that they’re worth expecting rather than worrying about. Here’s the honest list of what’s normal, what’s not, and when to call.
During the infusion (common)
- Cold sensation in the arm — IV fluid is room temperature; many patients feel a cool trickle along the vein. Normal.
- Garlic / metallic taste — particularly with glutathione, B-complex, or vitamin C. Lasts the infusion, harmless.
- Warmth or flushing — common with magnesium, niacin (B3), and vitamin C. Often mild.
- Mild urgency to urinate — your kidneys are doing their job. Use the bathroom afterward.
- Slight headache or lightheadedness — fast magnesium infusion or a small blood-pressure dip. Slows the rate.
After the infusion (common)
- Frequent urination for 2–6 hours — expected and a sign the IV is working.
- Mild bruising at the IV site — small bruise common, particularly if the site was hard to find.
- Energy boost lasting a few hours — modest in well-hydrated adults.
- Better symptom control — less headache, less nausea, less fatigue — if those were the reason for the IV.
- Mild fatigue in some patients later in the day.
Uncommon but normal
- Vein irritation — occasional mild discomfort along the vein for 24–48 hours. Warm compresses help.
- Slightly elevated heart rate for 30–60 minutes after — particularly with B-complex.
- Mild stomach upset — uncommon but possible.
- Brief dizziness on standing — usually resolves with seated rest.
What to expect with specific ingredients
Magnesium
Warmth, flushing, occasional drop in blood pressure. Slow the rate; symptoms ease.
Vitamin C (high-dose)
Mild kidney stress at high doses; avoid in people with kidney problems or G6PD deficiency.
NAD+
Flushing, chest pressure feeling, GI cramping during infusion. The rate is slowed dramatically. See our NAD+ IV page for the full picture.
Glutathione
Garlic/sulfur taste, very rarely a respiratory issue. Mild and short-lived.
Zofran
Mild headache, constipation, rare arrhythmia (QT effect).
Toradol
Mild stomach upset, rare bleeding risk, kidney stress with repeated dosing.
Famotidine
Usually nothing. Occasional headache.
Less common — call us
- Significant pain at the IV site, redness extending up the arm.
- Persistent shortness of breath or wheezing.
- Severe headache or persistent confusion.
- Rash, hives, or facial swelling (early allergic reaction).
- Persistent vomiting after the IV.
- Chest pain or fast/irregular heartbeat.
Call us at +52 1 624 409 5065. For chest pain, stroke symptoms, severe allergic reaction — call 911 (066 in Mexico) immediately.
Rare but serious
- Anaphylaxis — sudden severe allergic reaction. Rare, but every reputable provider carries epinephrine and rescue medications.
- Phlebitis (vein inflammation) — uncommon, treated with warm compresses and NSAIDs.
- Infiltration — fluid leaking outside the vein. Stops the infusion, treats the swelling, and finds a different vein.
- Fluid overload — too much volume too fast in someone with heart or kidney disease. Doctor-supervised IVs avoid this.
- Air embolism — vanishingly rare with modern equipment.
How to recover well after an IV
- Drink water steadily through the day.
- Eat a real meal within an hour or two.
- Avoid heavy alcohol for 12+ hours (less is fine).
- Keep the IV-site bandage on for an hour, then check for bruising.
- Rest if you feel tired; not everyone is “back to 100%” immediately.
When to expect peak benefit
Most patients feel best 30 minutes to 4 hours after the IV. Some report a “second wind” the next morning, particularly with sleep. The honest rule of thumb: IV gets you 70% of the way back; the rest is sleep, food, and time.
Related reading
Our IV therapy benefits guide explains what IV realistically does; how IV fluids work covers the mechanism; IV drip safety checklist helps you vet your provider.
Frequently asked questions
Will I feel different right away?
Often within 15–30 minutes — particularly if the IV is treating nausea, dehydration, or headache.
How long does the IV “effect” last?
Hydration: hours to a day. Vitamins: short — your body excretes excess. Symptomatic relief: variable.
Should I worry about a small bruise at the IV site?
No, very common. Resolves over a few days.
Can I drive after the IV?
Usually yes, unless you received a sedating add-on or have ongoing dizziness — ask the provider.
Book a doctor-supervised IV · Call +52 1 624 409 5065 · WhatsApp
Educational, not medical advice. COFEPRIS-licensed clinic. Call us with any concerning post-IV symptom.