Well shit, your competent? doctor knew that a long time ago and made damn sure you had some immediately poststroke! Oh NO, nothing happened because your doctor is so fucking incompetent!
- heat shock proteins
(6 posts to April 2013)
- sauna
(16 posts to January 2015)
Scientists are discovering that sauna's health benefits aren't all hot air
As with exercise, this "acute stressor" is then followed by improvements in these markers of cardiovascular health and a calming of the nervous system during the recovery period, he says.
The role of inflammation
While cardiovascular health has the most supporting data, large-scale studies have also linked sauna use to lower rates of respiratory illness and even some neurodegenerative conditions like dementia and Alzheimer's.
There are a number of mechanisms that could explain the decreased risk of chronic disease, among them the effects on systemic inflammation and oxidative stress. In a 2018 study, Kunutsor and his colleagues showed that Finns who frequently sauna have lower levels of inflammatory markers. Experiments have revealed that sauna and other forms of heat therapy also cause the secretion of various hormones and boost immune cells, at least in the short-term. The role of heat shock proteins is of particular interest. Sauna enthusiasts sit inside a barrel sauna during the Seattle Sauna Festival. According to Christopher Minson, a human physiologist at the University of Oregon, growing evidence shows that regular sauna use can combat inflammation. Mike Kane for NPR Minson says these help combat harmful molecules called reactive oxygen species that can build up inside of us and trigger a cascade of inflammation.The evidence base has grown considerably in the last decade. But Kunutsor says there's still a need for large, well-controlled trials, particularly in populations that are "sauna naive," to tease out the effects. He thinks more evidence may lead medical societies to consider incorporating sauna use into official health guidelines.
A mental health boost
For many sauna enthusiasts, the biggest draw is how it makes them feel.
As with the cold plunging craze, saunas increasingly serve as a kind of social lubricant, a place where people can find connection and a brief reprieve from their phones.
However, the link to mental health also has a physiological basis that researchers like Dr. Charles Raison are trying to understand.
"High heat administered for a time-limited period is an antidepressant and a pretty good one," says Raison, a professor of psychiatry and human ecology at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.
This research spans various forms of heat therapy, not just traditional Finnish saunas.
For example, Raison's group uses a special hyperthermia machine so participants can reach a core body temperature of 101.3 Fahrenheit – hotter than you could typically achieve in a sauna. Their heads, cooled with ice packs, stick out of the machine.
The data gathered so far suggest a linear relationship: The hotter a person gets, up to a certain point, the less depressed they feel in the following days and weeks.
"These studies are small, but the signal is pretty clear," he says.
For example, a randomized-controlled trial of about 30 people, published in 2016, found significant reductions in symptoms of depression after just one session of whole body hyperthermia, compared to a group that received a sham treatment.
"The pathways in the brain and body that mediate thermoregulation overlap spectacularly with the pathways that mediate mood, desire, the state of emotions," Raison says.
An intriguing finding from this research relates to an immune-signaling molecule called Interleukin-6, or IL-6. An acute spike in IL-6 following heat exposure appears to correlate with how much depressive symptoms improve.
More broadly, scientists interested in leveraging heat for mental health have noticed a link to body temperature, specifically that people with depression tend to run hotter, according to a 2024 study of more than 20,000 adults.
"What that shows is people with depression may have some thermoregulatory challenges such that they're not able to cool down so well," says Ashley Mason, a researcher at the University of California San Francisco Osher Center for Integrative Health, whose lab published those findings and is running several trials on heat exposure and sauna.
Given that pattern, it may seem counterintuitive to then expose someone to high heat, but in reality, data suggest this can actually improve a person's ability to thermoregulate, she says.
If you try it
If you don't have a sauna available, the researchers who spoke with NPR said the health benefits of sauna bathing extend to other forms of passive heat therapy, including steam rooms and hot tubs, provided they're hot enough.
There aren't large, well-controlled trials that have compared how outcomes differ based on the amount of time you spend in a sauna week-to-week or the precise temperature.
The Finnish data suggest you need at least three to four sauna visits a week, with each session lasting a minimum of 15 minutes to get the "optimal benefits," says Kunutsor at the University of Manitoba.
While it can be a similar stimulus as light exercise, he stresses sauna is by no means a substitute — and his research shows you stand to gain the most by doing both.
Minson, who advises professional athletes on using heat to improve performance, recommends aiming for about 20 to 30 minutes in the sauna immediately after a workout.
"If you're doing that smartly, then you're getting the best benefits of exercise training and potentially increasing some of the oxygen-carrying capacity of your blood," he says.
But proceed with caution, particularly if you're a newcomer or have an underlying health condition. Heat-related illness like heat exhaustion is a risk — symptoms tend to crop up when people are already vulnerable because they're fighting a cold or some underlying infection.
The notion that you can "sweat out the toxins" — whether that's due to a bug or last night's round of shots — is "simply not true," says Minson.
And like exercise, even the experienced sauna-goer can overdo it.
On a scale of 1 to 10 – where 10 feels like you're on the surface of the sun – he suggests aiming for about a 6 or 7.
"You don't want to feel uncomfortably hot," he says, "You can push that for a little while, but if you go for too long, there's no real added benefit."
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