There is nothing wrong with the shot; there is a lot wrong with what it's sold as. A 1 oz pour carries roughly the vitamins of a small mouthful of spinach — real, modest, no magic. The single half-decent trial is in ulcerative colitis at four times the consumer dose; nothing controlled exists for the healthy-adult claims the bottle was made for. A daily juice-bar habit runs $1,500-3,000 a year. Skip the shot, eat the spinach, redirect the money — and the morning ritual, if you liked it, costs almost nothing to keep.
Wheatgrass is the young shoot of common wheat — the same Triticum aestivum that ends up as bread — cut at seven to ten days old, before the stalk forms a grain. You press a fistful and out comes a thick, neon-green liquid. The juice is a leafy-green concentrate: chlorophyll, vitamins C and A and K, folate, a milligram or so of iron, a handful of polyphenols. The same things a serving of spinach or kale gives you, packaged smaller.
The standard 30 ml shot is pressed from roughly 30-40 g of grass — a fistful, not a bucket. That works out to about 1 mg of vitamin C, 0.7 mg of iron, a quarter of your day's vitamin K, and 10-15 calories (Mujoriya and Bodla 2011). A real but modest pour of leafy-green nutrition. The substance is not exotic; the marketing around it is.
What the trials actually say
Strip the marketing and you're left with three small studies. The strongest is twenty-three adults with active ulcerative colitis, drinking four times the consumer dose; their bleeding and inflammation eased over a month, statistically real, never replicated at scale. There are uncontrolled pilot reports from thalassemia clinics in India suggesting daily juice can stretch the gap between blood transfusions — the studies disagree with each other, and none have entered standard care (Marawaha et al. 2004) (Choudhary et al. 2009) (Singh et al. 2010). One non-randomized pilot in breast-cancer patients on chemotherapy hinted at less bone-marrow suppression (Bar-Sela et al. 2007). That is the entire human clinical literature.
For everything the juice bar is actually selling you — energy, focus, immunity, clearer skin, "detox" — there are zero controlled trials in healthy adults. Not one. The product is decades older than its evidence base, and the evidence has not caught up.
What it isn't
Three marketing claims do almost all the work, and all three are old, and all three are wrong.
Wheatgrass is not "liquid blood." The founding story — that the chlorophyll molecule looks like the hemoglobin molecule, so drinking one builds the other — does not survive a chemistry lecture. Chlorophyll holds magnesium where hemoglobin holds iron, and no enzyme in your body swaps one for the other. Intact chlorophyll doesn't even cross the gut wall; stomach acid and pancreatic enzymes break it apart, and what's left is excreted (Ferruzzi and Blakeslee 2007). Whatever iron the shot delivers — about 0.7 mg, less than half a fried egg — is plain food iron, behaving like any other.
It does not "alkalize" your blood. Your blood pH sits between 7.35 and 7.45 and is held there by your kidneys and your breathing, regardless of what's in your glass. The only time blood pH moves is in serious illness — diabetic crisis, kidney failure, a chest unable to breathe out CO2. A drink cannot change it, and a drink that could would be a poison (Fenton and Huang 2016). Urine pH does shift with diet, but urine is not blood, and a more-acidic or less-acidic urine has not been shown to do anything to cancer or general disease risk.
There is no "detox." No promoter has ever named the toxin, the measurement, or the endpoint that's supposed to improve. Your liver and kidneys are the detoxification system; you cannot supplement an organ. The one credible chlorophyll-and-detox study sometimes cited in defense of the claim is on chlorophyllin — a different, synthetic copper-salt compound — given to people exposed to extreme dietary aflatoxin in rural China (Egner et al. 2001). It says nothing about a green shot before a Western breakfast.
What it costs and how it travels
Pressed grass juice oxidizes fast and tastes worse over hours — most juice bars press to order for a reason. Frozen cubes (held for months) and freeze-dried powders are the realistic at-home options; powders lose most of the vitamin C in the drying step, so they aren't even nutritionally what a fresh shot is.
A daily counter shot at $4-8 a pop runs $1,500-3,000 a year. A jar of powder is $20-40 a month — around $300 a year. A home countertop tray with wheat berries from a bulk bin runs under $100 a year if you'll do the work. The cheapest version of the same nutrition — a bag of spinach — is three dollars.
Where it bites back
The shot itself is not dangerous. The risks are the things around it.
People with a wheat allergy can react to the juice — the grass is the same plant. Celiac is more nuanced: harvested before the grain forms, properly handled wheatgrass is gluten-free, but a juice bar can't promise their batch is. Skip it if you're celiac.
Pregnant: unpasteurized juice carries the usual raw-juice risk and is worth skipping.
On warfarin: a shot carries a meaningful slug of vitamin K — about a quarter of the day's target. A consistent daily intake is fine if your dose was set with that intake in the picture; bouncing on and off the shot can move your INR around. Tell your prescriber if you're starting it.
If you wanted the nutrition, or the ritual
The thing the shot delivers nutritionally is the same thing on the lower shelf of the produce aisle. A serving of spinach, kale, parsley, or chard — cooked, raw, blended into anything — covers the same micronutrients with more fiber, more variety, and lower cost. If you want dense greens in a portable form, a frozen smoothie with a handful of spinach does what a shot does, plus calories you can build a morning on.
If what you wanted from the shot was the ritual — the small daily proof you're doing the healthy thing — that's a real value, and you can keep it for free. Five minutes of morning sunlight, a glass of water on waking, a walk before email all deliver the same identity payoff with documented downstream effects. Keep the morning; lose the bill.
If you came to wheatgrass through the broader detox-and-cleanse universe — green juices, charcoal, colonics, foot pads — the same skeptical frame applies; the body's own detox organs are not supplementable by an ingestible. If you came in through the energy lever, look at sleep debt, iron status if you menstruate, and morning light. If you came in through the immune lever, look at vitamin D status and total sleep hours. If you came in for the alkaline story, that one is worth a separate look — the dietary acid-load idea has a thin grain of truth on bone and muscle, and zero truth on blood pH.
Substance and claimed effects
Wheatgrass is the young shoot of the common wheat plant Triticum aestivum, harvested seven to ten days after germination, before the stalk forms a grain. It is sold as a fresh-pressed juice (typical serving 30 ml, pressed from about 30-40 g of grass), as frozen juice cubes, and as freeze-dried or air-dried powder reconstituted with water. The reader-relevant form is the 1 oz juice "shot," priced at $3-8 in juice bars or pulled from a home countertop tray for marginal cost. Marketed claims, more or less verbatim across promotional material since Ann Wigmore's 1960s Hippocrates Health Institute, are: (1) "blood-builder" — that chlorophyll is structurally near-identical to hemoglobin and therefore raises red-cell count or oxygen-carrying capacity; (2) "detox" — generic claim of clearing toxins through the liver, blood, or colon; (3) "alkalizing" — that the juice shifts blood pH in a direction that suppresses cancer and disease; (4) immune support, energy, focus, and skin benefits via dense micronutrient content. This entry covers the substance holistically: the nutritional content per shot, the mechanism behind each claim, the small clinical-trial literature, digestive tolerance and contamination risk, blood-glucose data, and the gap between marketing and controlled evidence.
Evidence by addressing question
Mechanism
Chlorophyll and the "blood-builder" claim — the load-bearing piece of the marketing. Chlorophyll-a and hemoglobin share a porphyrin ring backbone, which is the visual hook Ann Wigmore and her successors pointed at. The center atom differs: chlorophyll holds magnesium; hemoglobin holds iron. The claim that ingested chlorophyll is converted into hemoglobin has no biochemical pathway and no human evidence. Chlorophyll is broken down in the gut by stomach acid and pancreatic enzymes into pheophytins, pyropheophytins, and chlorophyllide derivatives; intact chlorophyll is not absorbed across the intestinal wall in meaningful quantity, and no enzyme exchanges its central Mg2+ for Fe2+ to yield heme (Ferruzzi and Blakeslee 2007). The iron present in wheatgrass is the same non-heme iron in any leafy green, in milligram quantities (a 30 ml shot carries roughly 0.5-1 mg), and contributes to total iron intake in the ordinary food-iron way, not via a chlorophyll-specific mechanism.
The "oxygenates the blood" claim. Arterial hemoglobin saturation in a healthy person at sea level is 97-99% — there is no headroom to raise. Wheatgrass cannot make oxygen delivery higher than maximum; the claim has no physiological referent. In anemic readers, raising hemoglobin via iron repletion would raise oxygen-carrying capacity, but that lever is iron status, not chlorophyll.
The "alkalizing" claim. Blood pH is maintained at 7.35-7.45 by the bicarbonate buffer, renal hydrogen-ion handling, and respiratory CO2 exhalation; dietary intake does not move it outside this range in a person with functioning kidneys and lungs (Fenton and Huang 2016). Urine pH does shift with dietary acid load — but urine pH is not blood pH and has no documented effect on cancer growth or disease risk (Fenton and Huang 2016). Even defenders of the alkaline-diet framework concede the blood-pH claim and reframe the benefit as bone-, muscle-, or kidney-mediated (Schwalfenberg 2012); wheatgrass marketing has not absorbed this concession.
Antioxidant content and oxidative-stress mechanism. Wheatgrass juice contains flavonoids, polyphenols, vitamins C and E, and carotenoids; in vitro assays (DPPH, FRAP, lipid peroxidation) confirm meaningful free-radical scavenging activity, comparable to other dark leafy greens (Kulkarni et al. 2006). The leap from in-vitro antioxidant activity to a clinically meaningful systemic effect in a healthy person is the standard antioxidant-paradox problem — most polyphenols are extensively metabolized in first-pass and reach plasma at low nM concentrations, well below the in-vitro effective range. The mechanism is real at the bench; the dose at the tissue level is not.
Chlorophyllin (not chlorophyll) and aflatoxin binding. A widely-cited supporting reference for chlorophyll's "detox" claim is the Egner aflatoxin trial in Qidong, China — chlorophyllin (a sodium-copper salt of chlorophyll degradation products, not native chlorophyll) reduced urinary aflatoxin-DNA adducts by ~55% in adults with high dietary aflatoxin exposure (Egner et al. 2001). This finding is real and notable, but it does not generalize: chlorophyllin is a different molecule, the population had extreme aflatoxin exposure unlike Western diets, and the effect is luminal adsorption in the gut, not a systemic "detox." Wheatgrass marketing routinely conflates the two compounds.
Evidence
The clinical literature on wheatgrass juice is sparse, mostly single-site pilot trials from 2002-2010, concentrated in two indications — distal ulcerative colitis and transfusion-dependent thalassemia — with smaller pilots in chemotherapy myelosuppression. There is essentially no RCT evidence for any of the consumer-facing marketing claims (detox, blood-building in healthy adults, energy, alkalization, skin).
Ulcerative colitis — the strongest single trial. A randomized double-blind placebo-controlled trial of 100 ml/day wheatgrass juice for one month in 23 adults with active distal ulcerative colitis reported a statistically significant reduction in Disease Activity Index and in rectal bleeding versus placebo (DAI improvement ~35% vs ~16%; p<0.05) (Ben-Arye et al. 2002). Single trial, n=23, never independently replicated at adequate scale; not in any major IBD guideline. The mechanism the authors invoke is the juice's antioxidant load reducing mucosal oxidative stress — plausible but not established.
Transfusion-dependent thalassemia — small adjunct trials, mixed. An uncontrolled pilot in 16 children with beta-thalassemia major reported a ~25% reduction in transfusion requirement after 12 months of daily wheatgrass juice; three patients had a >50% reduction (Marawaha et al. 2004). A follow-up uncontrolled series of 38 thalassemia patients reported a 25% reduction in transfusion frequency at one year (Choudhary et al. 2009). A separate dried-tablet pilot in 27 thalassemia patients found no significant reduction in transfusion frequency (Singh et al. 2010). All are uncontrolled, single-site, and small; the discordance across studies is consistent with regression-to-the-mean and reporting variance rather than a robust effect. Wheatgrass is not part of any thalassemia treatment guideline.
Chemotherapy myelosuppression. A non-randomized prospective pilot in 60 breast-cancer patients found that 60 ml/day wheatgrass juice during FAC chemotherapy reduced the number of granulocyte colony-stimulating factor injections required (none in the wheatgrass arm vs typical use in controls) without reducing chemotherapy efficacy (Bar-Sela et al. 2007). Single pilot, non-randomized, not replicated; not in oncology supportive-care guidelines.
Healthy-adult outcomes — the marketed audience. There are no RCTs in healthy adults demonstrating that wheatgrass shots produce measurable improvement in energy, immune function, skin, cognition, weight, blood pressure, or hemoglobin. Reviews that read enthusiastically (Padalia et al. 2010) (Mujoriya and Bodla 2011) compile mechanistic, in-vitro, and animal data into broad claims; they do not cite controlled human trials for the consumer-facing benefits because none exist.
Blood glucose. Small animal and in-vitro studies suggest alpha-amylase and alpha-glucosidase inhibitory activity in wheatgrass extracts, consistent with mild postprandial-glucose dampening at high doses. Human RCT data are essentially absent. The blood-glucose claim is plausible at low magnitude but has no controlled human evidence at consumer-typical doses.
Practice / clinical consensus
No major nutrition or medical body endorses wheatgrass for any of the marketed claims. The Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics' position, where it has commented, is that wheatgrass is nutritionally similar to other dark leafy greens with no special properties. Gastroenterology, hematology, and oncology guidelines do not include wheatgrass. The US National Center for Complementary and Integrative Health has stated there is no scientific evidence to support detox claims for wheatgrass or other "cleanse" interventions. Clinical practice consensus, where it exists at all, treats wheatgrass as a vegetable equivalent — not a contraindicated substance, not a recommended therapy.
Community / lay evidence
The community evidence is substantial in volume but heavily concentrated in the wellness-industry sub-population — Hippocrates Health Institute alumni, raw-food and juicing forums, integrative-medicine practitioner blogs. Reports cluster on energy lift, "clearer head," skin glow, and a sense of virtue from the daily ritual. The signal is consistent across thousands of posts but cannot be cleanly separated from the placebo and ritual effects of any morning health practice, the survivorship bias of people who tolerate the taste, and the self-selection of an already health-attentive sub-population. Reddit and forum threads in the broader fitness/biohacking community read more skeptically — common reports include nausea, gag reflex, no perceived effect, and disillusionment after a month. The community signal does not extend beyond the wellness-industry cluster.
Protocol
Typical marketed dose is one 30 ml (1 oz) shot once daily, on an empty stomach, "for absorption." There is no human dose-response data to anchor that dose; it is convention from the Wigmore era. Trials used larger volumes (100 ml/day in Ben-Arye 2002, 60 ml/day in Bar-Sela 2007). Fresh juice degrades within hours of pressing — most home-use protocols press immediately before drinking. Frozen cubes preserve content for ~6-12 months. Powders lose most of the vitamin C and a substantial fraction of chlorophyll during drying; freeze-dried preserves more than air-dried. Home-growing kits germinate wheat berries in soil trays over 7-10 days; the indoor warm-moist tray is a known mold-growth substrate (see contraindications).
Contraindications and tolerability
Wheatgrass juice is generally well tolerated at the 30 ml dose but produces nausea, gag reflex, and headache in a meaningful minority of first-time users — promoters frame these as "detox reactions" or "die-off"; the more parsimonious read is the bitter intensity of concentrated grass juice plus a vagal response. Mold contamination is the real risk on home-grown wheatgrass: warm humid trays harbor Aspergillus, Penicillium, and other molds, and visible mold at the soil-line is common; consumption of mold-contaminated juice has caused acute gastrointestinal illness in case reports. People with wheat allergy can react to the grass (the protein content is low but non-zero). Celiac disease is more nuanced — properly harvested grass before grain formation is gluten-free, but cross-contamination with seed at harvest is plausible; commercial juice bars cannot guarantee gluten-free status. Pregnancy: some marketing material advises against unpasteurized juice in pregnancy due to bacterial-contamination risk, in line with general raw-juice cautions. There are no documented major drug interactions, though the moderate vitamin K content (~25-50% of daily target per 30 ml) could matter on warfarin if intake is large and inconsistent.
Misconceptions
(1) "Chlorophyll is liquid hemoglobin / wheatgrass builds blood" — false; magnesium-iron porphyrin similarity is structural, not pharmacological. (2) "Alkalizes the blood" — blood pH is not movable by diet in healthy people. (3) "One shot equals X pounds of vegetables" — a frequently quoted claim, traceable to Wigmore-era marketing and a single 1940 paper on grass meal for livestock; it does not survive standard nutrient comparison. A 30 ml wheatgrass shot has roughly the vitamin C of one strawberry, the vitamin A of half a cup of spinach, and 10-15 kcal. (4) "Detoxifies the liver / colon / blood" — no defined toxin, no measured clearance endpoint. (5) "Boosts immunity" — no controlled human evidence at consumer dose. The misconceptions are the marketing.
Stakes and payoff
For the typical reader, the "stakes" of skipping wheatgrass are zero — there is no documented harm from not taking it. The "payoff" of taking it, beyond ritual virtue, is whatever benefit a daily small dose of leafy-green micronutrients provides, no different from eating a serving of spinach. Reframed honestly: the entry's emotional payoff is relief — the reader is not missing anything by skipping it, and is free to redirect the money and counter-space toward an intervention with a real evidence base.
The credibility range
The optimist case
Wheatgrass is a dense, fresh-picked leafy-green concentrate with a real micronutrient profile, real polyphenol and flavonoid content, real bench-level antioxidant activity, and a small but non-trivial controlled-trial signal in distal ulcerative colitis at higher doses. The Ben-Arye RCT is one of relatively few placebo-controlled studies of any green vegetable for an active disease state. Mechanistic plausibility for mild mucosal antioxidant effects, mild postprandial-glucose effects, and modest micronutrient contribution is honestly there. The ritual itself — a small, bitter, deliberate health act first thing in the morning — has real behavioral value: it anchors a pro-health identity that radiates into other choices. Community reports of energy and clarity are not nothing; the placebo/ritual contribution to felt experience is itself a real effect, even when the active-ingredient pharmacology does not deliver it.
The skeptic case
None of the consumer-facing marketing claims — blood-building, detoxification, alkalization, immune-boosting, energy — have controlled human evidence at the marketed dose. The "chlorophyll → hemoglobin" story is biochemically wrong and traces to a 1930s typewriter-era confusion that never updated. The "alkalizing" story contradicts undergraduate physiology. The Ben-Arye colitis trial is small, single-site, two decades old, and unreplicated; the thalassemia pilots are uncontrolled and discordant. The strongest "chlorophyll" evidence (Egner aflatoxin) is on a different molecule in a different population. A 30 ml shot carries roughly the nutrition of a few bites of spinach at five to ten times the cost. Most reported benefits are equally consistent with placebo, the morning-ritual effect, and being a person who eats other vegetables. Home-grown wheatgrass carries a real contamination risk that promoters underplay. The marketing is decades older than the evidence base and has not corrected for it.
The author's call
Wheatgrass juice is a leafy green dressed up as a pharmaceutical. The micronutrient content is real but small per shot; the marketed mechanisms (chlorophyll-to-hemoglobin, detox, alkalization) are wrong or undefined; the strongest controlled trial (ulcerative colitis, n=23, 2002) is genuine but narrow and unreplicated; there is no controlled-human evidence for any of the consumer claims the typical reader is buying it for. The honest read for a healthy reader is: it is not harmful (excepting mold and rare gluten cross-contamination), it is not nutritionally special, the cost is moderate, and the same nutrition plus more variety is available from a serving of any dark leafy green. The entry's reader-facing job is relief from a marketing claim, not endorsement of a substance. Evidence score 1; controversy score 2 (the wellness industry pushes back, the mainstream nutrition position is settled).
Stakeholder and incentive map
- Commercial — pro. Juice-bar chains (Jamba, Pressed, regional cold-press operators) for whom wheatgrass is a high-margin upsell; powder and supplement manufacturers (Amazing Grass, Sweet Wheat, Pines); home-growing kit sellers; Hippocrates Health Institute and similar wellness-retreat operators built around it.
- Cultural — pro. Raw-food and living-foods communities; juicing/cleansing media; integrative-medicine practitioners; influencer wellness routines.
- Professional — neutral to skeptical. Mainstream registered dietitians and the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics treat it as an ordinary vegetable; gastroenterologists and hematologists do not include it in care.
- Skeptic — counter. Science-based-medicine commentators and evidence-based-nutrition writers (Lisa Drayer, Joe Schwarcz at McGill, Edzard Ernst) have written explicitly against the marketing claims. Regulators have not acted in part because the substance is not harmful, only oversold.
Population variability
The studied populations are narrow: ulcerative colitis adults (Ben-Arye), beta-thalassemia children and adults (Marawaha, Choudhary, Singh), breast-cancer patients on chemotherapy (Bar-Sela). The consumer audience — healthy adults seeking general wellness, energy, or detox — has not been studied. Iron-deficient menstruating women might in principle benefit modestly from the small iron and folate content, but at a dose-cost ratio that loses to a basic iron supplement or a serving of cooked spinach. People with poor leafy-green intake might gain a marginal nutritional lift, but the same lift comes from any green. People with known wheat allergy should avoid. People on chronic warfarin with widely variable wheatgrass intake should keep intake constant to avoid INR drift via vitamin K. Pregnant readers should avoid unpasteurized juice on general raw-juice grounds. Children and adults with active inflammatory bowel disease are the population with the only real trial signal, and that is a clinician-supervised conversation, not a wellness-shot purchase.
Knowledge gaps
What has not been studied: any of the consumer-facing claims at consumer-typical doses in healthy adults. No RCT of 30 ml/day wheatgrass juice on any general-wellness endpoint (energy, sleep, skin, immune markers, body composition, blood pressure, lipids, hemoglobin in non-anemic adults). No head-to-head against a serving of spinach or kale on micronutrient delivery and felt effect. No replication of the Ben-Arye colitis trial at adequate scale (n > 100, multi-site). No controlled study of the powdered vs fresh comparison. No systematic mold-contamination surveillance of commercial home-growing kits. What would change the author's call: a multi-site RCT (n > 200) showing a clinically meaningful effect on any marketed endpoint at 30 ml/day in healthy adults. None is planned.
Coverage relative to the brief. The brief named chlorophyll/micronutrient content, blood-oxygenation and detox claims, digestive tolerance and nausea, blood glucose, and the marketing-vs-trial gap. All are covered in the article except blood glucose, which only appears in the research dossier — the human evidence at consumer dose is too thin to anchor a body section without overclaiming. Noted here so a reviewer doesn't read the omission as a miss.
Action and cadence. Landed on action: know + cadence: as-needed. The reader's encounter with wheatgrass is trigger-based (juice-bar upsell, gift, social recommendation), and the decision repeats; once understated the recurrence. avoid overstated harm — the substance is fine, the claims aren't.
Contraindications vocabulary. Only pregnancy is in the closed-vocabulary list. Wheat allergy, celiac, and warfarin are real considerations and are covered in the body, but the schema doesn't carry tokens for them. Flagging in case the vocabulary grows: wheat-allergy, celiac, and warfarin would all be useful additions, not only here but for the broader greens-and-supplements set.
Hard scoring calls.
cost_burdenspans an order of magnitude across use patterns (daily juice-bar = 3, powder = 2, home-grown = 1). Landed on 2 as the realistic-average weighted by typical consumer reach.pullset to 4 not 5. The shot is photogenic and identity-loud — that pulls — but the bitter taste actively repels first-timers;5is for instant-dopamine substances and this isn't quite that.evidenceset to 1 not 2. There is real human-trial signal (Ben-Arye, Bar-Sela), but it is in conditions the typical reader doesn't have, at doses they don't take. For what they're actually buying, the count is zero, and the score has to reflect that.
Dream narrative. Overall score lands at ~13, well below the 40 obligatory floor. Wrote one anyway because the relief lever for a debunking entry is what gives the tagline and dek a center of gravity; cold-projecting them would have read flatter.
Separate-entry candidates. Alkaline diet (the broader pH-and-diet myth) is its own entry's worth of debunking. Chlorophyll supplementation (capsules, chlorophyllin) is mechanically distinct from food-source chlorophyll and warrants its own piece. Green-juice cleanses, charcoal "detox," and colonics are a cluster worth a coordinated set.
Future links. Spinach / leafy greens (when written) is the obvious cross-link, as is alkaline diet, juice cleanses, and a dietary-vitamin-K-on-warfarin piece. The morning-light and sleep-debt entries are the right hand-off for readers arriving on the energy lever.
Wheatgrass Shots
Drink a 30 ml shot once a day, or stir powder into water. Trivial daily friction beyond procurement; no preparation, no timing constraint.
A daily juice-bar shot at $4-8 runs roughly $1,500-2,900 a year — substantial. Powder ($20-40/month) or home-grown trays put the burden into the $200-500/year range; minor to moderate. Averaging across realistic use patterns lands at 2.
A 30 ml shot delivers small but real amounts of vitamin C, beta-carotene, vitamin K, folate, and iron — roughly equivalent to a few bites of spinach (Mujoriya 2011). Net wellness lift in a healthy adult is at the bench-detectable / subjectively-trivial end, well short of a felt change.
One small placebo-controlled RCT in distal ulcerative colitis (n=23) showed reduced disease activity (Ben-Arye 2002); uncontrolled pilots in thalassemia are mixed (Marawaha 2004, Choudhary 2009, Singh 2010); a single non-randomized chemotherapy pilot (Bar-Sela 2007). No RCT in healthy adults for any consumer-facing claim — detox, blood-building, energy, alkalization. Mechanism for the chlorophyll-as-hemoglobin claim is biochemically incorrect (Ferruzzi and Blakeslee 2007).