Healing, regeneration, and prevention as a coherent process
Medical therapy is often understood as a temporary intervention: a disease is treated, a procedure is performed, a measure is completed. However, it is only in the subsequent regeneration phase that the actual sustainability and success of a treatment becomes apparent – functionally, biologically, and in the long term.
hyba.DOX therefore understands therapy not as an isolated phase, but as a continuous process. Healing, recovery, and prevention are intertwined and build on each other. Acute medical successes only reach their full potential when the body is then specifically stabilized, supported, or—if appropriate—prepared in advance. The starting point is always a careful medical assessment of the individual's biological baseline, medical history, and current functional status.
At hyba.DOX, therapy does not mean doing as much as possible, but doing the right thing at the right time. The aim is to provide targeted support for complex healing processes, to accelerate them where possible, and to enable long-term stability – not through rigid programs, but through individually tailored therapeutic approaches.
Personalized integrative therapies (PIT)
Individualized therapy development based on medical principles
Standardized therapies are effective in many situations, but they reach their limits in cases of complex disease progression, delayed regeneration, or preventive issues. Different biological conditions, pre-existing conditions, increasing age, and individual stressors mean that identical treatment approaches can have very different effects.
hyba.DOX has developed specific Personalized Integrative Therapies (PIT) for different medical applications. These combine various therapeutic levels into an individually tailored overall concept. Integrative means the targeted combination of device-based therapies such as interval hypoxia training (IHT), red light therapy, and, in the future, hyperbaric oxygen therapy (HBOT*) or therapeutic apheresis*, with bioregenerative procedures—such as PRF, peptides, autologous exosomes, or biological hormone concepts—as well as individually selected supplements consisting of micronutrients and conventional medications. Not all components are used in every phase or for every indication; the decisive factor is their sensible combination.
The development and adaptation of a PIT is based on a comprehensive medical analysis, including relevant biomarkers, inflammation parameters, and functional relationships. To evaluate this data in a structured manner, hyba.DOX uses its own Precision Healing Engine, which supports physicians in the development, prioritization, and further development of personalized therapy strategies using AI. The aim is to provide targeted support for complex healing processes, accelerate them where appropriate, and dynamically adapt therapy as it progresses.
Personalized integrative therapies & Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT)
hyba.DOX develops Personalized Integrative Therapies (PIT), in which therapeutic procedures are not additive but functionally coordinated. Integrative in this context means the targeted combination of selected apparatus-based and bioregenerative approaches to form a biologically coherent overall concept.
In the integrative overall concept, hyperbaric oxygen therapy (HBOT) plays a special functional role. Under hyperbaric conditions, the physically dissolved oxygen in the blood increases by a factor of approximately 11 to 14, while the penetration depth of oxygen into the tissue and at the cellular level can be increased by a factor of 3 to 4. This increased oxygen availability influences central cellular processes... read more
The history of oxygen therapy
More than 400 years ago, people were already certain that oxygen had a particularly healing effect - and was more than just the air we breathe. But it took several centuries and a lot of research to understand the molecule oxygen. Even today, not everything is known, although oxygen is now classified as a prescription drug.
The goal has always been to supply more oxygen to the body. First attempts to increase the pressure with a steam engine failed. With the construction of the Brooklyn Bridge in New York from 1869 to 1880, oxygen therapy in a hyperbaric chamber achieved a breakthrough. During the construction of the foundations, divers with a correspondingly long dwell time were already used at that time. Known today as decompression sickness or diver's disease, the divers could soon no longer be used and suffered from corresponding pain and dizziness. It was therefore during this period that the hyperbaric chamber first found …read more