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The Potential Benefits Of The Cryotherapy Sherman Oaks CA Spas Offer

By Deborah Bailey


People are always looking for new ways to stay young, alert, and beat the odds of getting life threatening diseases and conditions. Every few years new trends and techniques catch their attention, and many are willing to undergo discomfort and spend significant amounts of money trying them out. The cryotherapy Sherman Oaks CA spas, and others, offer is one such trend. There are a number of possible benefits to the therapy, but the research is still too new to be conclusive.

Most have seen the news reports of hardy individuals throwing themselves into the icy water of lakes and ponds in the coldest months of the winter wearing only bathing suits. These bathers are convinced this activity promotes sharp minds, physical health, and longevity. It is a drastic form of cryotherapy, but not the one most people experience. The majority who try this therapy do so at trendy spas and health farms. They get into tanks filled with freezing water and stay for three to five minutes.

Doctors use this therapy to freeze warts and cancer cells. Those familiar with the technique caution participants not to stay too long, or fall asleep, in one of the booths. It could be deadly. Pregnant women, children, and people with high blood pressure and heart conditions should not use this therapy. Most agree that it may take several sessions to become accustomed to the freezing temperatures.

This therapy is used to relieve the aches and pains of joint and muscle conditions such as arthritis. It may help increase the speed of recovery for those suffering from sports injuries. The technique, in the form of ice packs, has been prescribed by physicians for many years as a way of relieving discomfort from over exercising and muscle pain. There have been mixed results in the studies done on the benefits of the therapy for reducing muscle pain.

Some people believe the therapy helps people lose weight. It may be that the body burns some calories in an attempt to warm itself up. It has been suggested that using the technique to reduce muscle aches and pains makes it easier for individuals to exercise. If, as some believe, the therapy reduces inflammations in the body, it would also reduce pain and make regular fitness regimens more feasible.

There may be a mental health benefit to cryotherapy. Preliminary studies have shown that about thirty percent of anxiety and depression sufferers have seen improvement using this therapy. It doesn't cure the problems, but seems to cut them by about half. This is a significant difference between these results and the results for those not on the therapy.

Inflammations of the skin, like eczema, may be improved with these treatments. A number of sufferers who tried it saw marked improvement. Some complained of patches of frostbite however.

The therapy may be somewhat helpful for those who suffer from migraines. While it did not eliminate the migraines, it did reduce the debilitating pain. The takeaway from preliminary research is that this therapy may have significant benefits in certain areas of health, but more study is needed.




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