"Regular
use of a sauna may impact a similar stress on the cardiovascular
system as running, and its regular use may be as effective
[at] burning calories."
Journal of the American Medical Association
- The Use of Infrared Heat to Product Cardiovascular Conditioning
- World-Wide Reports on Infrared Use
- Musculoskeletal Improvements with Infrared Heat
- Effects of Infrared Heat on Rheumatoid Arthritis
- Other Therapeutic Effects of Infrared Heat
- Infrared heat increases the extensibility of collagen tissues.
- Infrared heat decreases joint stiffness.
- Infrared heat relieves muscle spasms.
- Infrared heat treatment leads to pain relief.
- Infrared heat increases blood flow.
- Infrared heat assists in resolution of inflammatory infiltrates,
oedema, and exudates.
- Infrared heat introduced in cancer therapy.
- Infrared heat affects soft tissue injury.
- Chinese Studies Report Positive Effects of Infrared Heat
- Japanese Studies on the Positive Effects of Infrared Heat
- Speculation about Infrared Heat Effects on Blood Circulation
- Infrared Heat and Coronary Artery Disease, Arteriosclerosis,
and Hypertension
- Aging and Infrared Heat Therapy
- Ear, Nose, and Throat Conditions Relieved with Infrared Heat
- Contraindications
The Use of Infrared Heat to Produce Cardiovascular Conditioning
The August 7, 1981 issue of the Journal of the American Medical
Association (JAMA) reported what is common knowledge today: Many
people who run do so to place a demand on their cardiovascular
system as well as to build muscle. What isn't well known is that
it also reported the "regular use of a sauna may impart
a similar stress on the cardiovascular system, and its regular
use may be as effective as a means of cardiovascular conditioning
and burning of calories as regular exercise."
It has been found that the infrared sauna makes it possible for
people in wheelchairs, those who are otherwise unable to exert
themselves, and those who won't follow an exercising/conditioning
program to achieve a cardiovascular training effect. It also
allows for more variety in any ongoing training program.
Blood flow during whole-body hyperthermia is reported to rise
from a normal five to seven quarts a minute to as many as 13
quarts a minute.
Due to the deep penetration of infrared rays (over one and a
half inches into body tissue), there is a deep heating effect
in the muscle tissue and internal organs. The body responds to
this heat with a hypothalamic-induced increase in both heart
volume and rate. Beneficial heart stress leads to a sought-after
cardiovascular training and conditioning effect. Medical research
confirms the use of a sauna provides cardiovascular conditioning
as the body works to cool itself and involves substantial increases
in heart rate, cardiac output, and metabolic rate. As a confirmation
of the validity of this form of cardiovascular conditioning,
extensive research by NASA in the early 1980's led to the conclusion
that infrared stimulation of cardiovascular function would be
the ideal way to maintain cardiovascular conditioning in American
astronauts during long space flights.
Infrared Heat, Caloric Consumption, and Weight Control In its
Wellness Letter, October 1990, the University of California Berkeley
reported that "the 1980's were the decade of high-impact
aerobics classes and high-mileage training. Yet there was something
elitist about the way exercise was prescribed: only strenuous
workouts would do, you had to raise your heart rate to between
X and Y, and the only way to go was to "go for the burn." Such
strictures insured that most 'real' exercisers were relatively
young and in good shape to begin with. Many Americans got caught
up in the fitness boom, but probably just as many fell by the
wayside. As we've reported, recent research shows that you don't
have to run marathons to become fit - that burning just 1,000
calories a week...is enough. Anything goes, as long as it burns
these calories."
Guyton's Textbook of Medical Physiology reports that producing
one gram of sweat requires 0.586 kcal. The JAMA citation above
goes on to state that "A moderately conditioned person can
easily sweat off 500 grams in a sauna, consuming nearly 300 kcal
- the equivalent of running two to three miles. A heat-conditioned
person can easily sweat off 600 to 800 kcal with no adverse effect.
While the weight of water loss can be regained by rehydration,
the calories consumed will not be." Since a sauna helps
generate two to three times the sweat produced in a conventional
hot-air sauna, the implications for increased caloric consumption
are quite impressive.
Assuming one takes a sauna for 30 minutes, some interesting comparisons
can be drawn. Two of the highest calorie output exercises are
rowing and running marathons. Peak output on a rowing machine
or during a marathon burns about 600 calories in 30 minutes.
An infrared sauna may better this from "just slightly" up
to 250 percent by burning 900 to 2400 calories in the same period
of time. It might in a single session simulate the consumption
of energy equal to that expended in a six- to nine-mile run.
The infrared sauna can therefore, play a pivotal role in both
weight control and cardiovascular conditioning. It is valuable
for those who don't exercise and those who can't exercise and
want an effective weight control and fitness maintenance program,
and the benefits regular exercise contribute to such a program.
World-Wide Reports on Infrared Use
Over the last 25 years, Japanese and Chinese researchers and clinicians
have completed extensive research on infrared treatments and report many provocative
findings. In Japan, there is an "infrared society" composed of medical
doctors and physical therapists dedicated to further infrared research. Their
findings support the health benefits of infrared therapy as a method of healing.
There have been over 700,000 infrared thermal systems sold in
the Orient for whole-body treatments. An additional 30 million
people have received localized infrared treatment in the Orient,
Europe, and Australia with lamps, which emit the same 2 to 25
micron wave bands as employed in a whole-body system. In Germany,
physicians in an independently developed form have used whole-body
infrared therapy for over 80 years.
Musculoskeletal Improvements with Infrared Heat
Success has been reported from infrared treatments by Japanese
researchers for the following musculoskeletal conditions:
Effects of Infrared Heat on Rheumatoid Arthritis
A case study reported in Sweden worked with a 70-year-old man
who had rheumatoid arthritis secondary to acute rheumatic fever.
He had reached his toxic limit of gold injections and his Erythrocyte
Sedimentation Rate (ESR) was still 125. After using an infrared
heat system for less than five months, his ESR was down to
11.
The rheumatologist worked with a 14-year-old Swedish girl who
had difficulty walking downstairs due to knee pain from the age
of eight. This therapist told her mother the girl would be in
a wheelchair within two years if she didn't begin gold corticosteroid
therapy. After three infrared sauna treatments, she began to
become more agile and subsequently took up folk dancing without
the aid of conventional approaches in her recovery.
A clinical trial in Japan reported a successful solution for
seven out of seven cases of rheumatoid arthritis treated with
whole-body infrared therapy.
These case studies and clinical trials indicate that further
study is warranted for the use of whole-body infrared therapy
in the care of patients with rheumatoid arthritis.
Other Therapeutic Effects of Infrared Heat
The following information has been summarized from Chapter 9
of Therapeutic Heat and Cold, Fourth Edition, Editors Justus
F. Lehmann, M.D., Williams, and Wilkin, or concluded from data
gathered there.
Generally it is accepted that heat produces the following desirable
therapeutic effects:
1. Infrared heat increases the extensibility of collagen
tissues.
Tissues heated to 45 degrees Celsius and then stretched exhibit
a nonelastic residual elongation of about 0.5 to 0.9 percent
that persists after the stretch is removed. This does not occur
in these same tissues when stretched at normal tissue temperatures.
Therefore 20stretching sessions can produce a 10 to 18 percentage
increase in length of tissues heated and stretched.
Stretching of tissue in the presence of heat would be especially
valuable in working with ligaments, joint capsules, tendons,
fasciae, and synoviurn that have become scarred, thickened, or
contracted. Such stretching at 45 degrees Celsius caused much
less weakening in stretched tissues for a given elongation than
a similar elongation produced at normal tissue temperatures.
Experiments cited clearly showed low-force stretching could produce
significant residual elongation when heat is applied together
with stretching or range-of-motion exercises. This is safer than
stretching tissues at normal tissue temperatures.
2. Infrared heat decreases joint stiffness.
There was a 20 percent decrease in rheumatoid finger joint
stiffness at 45 degrees Celsius (112 degrees Fahrenheit) as compared
with 33 degrees Celsius (92 degrees Fahrenheit), which correlated
perfectly to both subjective and objective observation of stiffness.
Speculation has it that any stiffened joint and thickened connective
tissues may respond in a similar fashion.
3. Infrared heat relieves muscle spasms.
Muscle spasms have long been observed to be reduced through the
use of heat, be they secondary to underlying skeletal, joint,
or neuropathological conditions. This result is possibly produced
by the combined effect of heat on both primary and secondary
afferent nerves from spindle cells and from its effects on
Golgi tendon organs. The results produced demonstrated their
peak effect within the therapeutic temperature range obtainable
with radiant heat.
4. Infrared heat treatment leads to pain relief.
Pain may be relieved via the reduction of attendant
or secondary spasms. Pain is also at times related to ischemia
(lack of blood supply) due to tension or spasm that can be improved
by the hyperemia that heat-induced vasodilatation produces, thus
breaking the feedback loop in which the ischemia leads to further
spasm and then more pain.
Heat has been shown to reduce pain sensation by direct action
on both free-nerve endings in tissues and on peripheral nerves.
In one dental study, repeated heat applications led finally to
abolishment of the whole nerve response responsible for pain
arising from dental pulp.
Heat may lead to both increased endorphin production and a shutting
down of the so called "spinal gate" of Melzack and
Wall, each of which can reduce pain.
Localized infrared therapy using lamps tuned to the 2 to 25 micron
waveband is used for the treatment and relief of pain by over
40 reputable Chinese medical institutes.
5. Infrared heat increases blood flow.
Heating one area of the body produces reflex-modulated
vasodilators in distant-body areas, even in the absence of a
change in core body temperature. Heat one extremity and the contra
lateral extremity also dilates; heat a forearm and both lower
extremities dilate; heat the front of the trunk and the hand
dilates.
Heating muscles produces an increased blood flow level similar
to that seen during exercise. Temperature elevation also produces
an increased blood flow and dilation directly in capillaries,
arterioles, and venules, probably through direct action on their
smooth muscles. The release of bradykinin, released as a consequence
of sweat-gland activity, also produces increased blood flow and
vasodilatation.
Whole-body hyperthermia, with a consequent core temperature elevation,
further induces vasodilatation via a hypothalamic-induced decrease
in sympathetic tone on the arteriovenous anastomoses. Vasodilatation
is also produced by axonal reflexes that change vasomotor balance.
6. Infrared heat assists in resolution of inflammatory infiltrates,
oedema, and exudates.
Increased peripheral circulation provides the transport needed to
help evacuate oedema, which can help inflammation, decrease pain, and help
speed healing.
7. Infrared heat introduced in cancer therapy.
More recently, infrared heat has been used in cancer therapy. This
is a new experimental procedure that shows great promise in some cases when
used properly. American researchers favour careful monitoring of the tumour
temperature; whereas, the successes reported in Japan make no mention of such
precaution.
8. Infrared heat affects soft tissue injury.
Infrared healing is now becoming a leading edge care for soft tissue
injuries to promote both relief in chronic or intractable "permanent" cases,
and accelerated healing in newer injuries.
Chinese Studies Report Positive Effects of Infrared Heat
Researchers report over 90 percent success in a summary of Chinese
studies that assessed the effects of infrared heat therapy on:
- Soft tissue injury
- Lumbar strain
- Periarthritis of the shoulder
- Sciatica
- Pain during menstruation
- Neurodermatitis
- Eczema with infection
- Post-surgical infections
- Facial paralysis (Bell's Palsy)
- Diarrhoea
- Cholecystitis
- Neurasthenia
- Pelvic infection
- Paediatric pneumonia
- Tinea
- Frostbite with inflammation
Japanese Studies on the Positive Effects of Infrared
Heat
- As reported in Infrared Therapy by Dr. Yamajaki, Japanese
researchers have produced the following provocative results
with whole-body infrared heat:
- Burns (relieves pain and decreases healing time with less
scarring) High blood pressure (safe in 40 to 50 degrees Celsius,
104 to 122 degrees Fahrenheit, regular use helps lower pressure)
- Low blood pressure (sauna trains the body to raise the pressure)
- Brain damage (accelerated repair in brain contusions) Short-term
memory loss (improved)
- Cancer of the tongue (improved)
- Toxic electromagnetic fields (effects neutralized)
- Cerebral haemorrhage (speeds and significantly enhances recovery)
- Arthritis, acute and chronic (greatly relieved)
- Gouty arthritis (relieved)
- Rheumatoid Arthritis (relieved)
- Menopausal symptoms (relieved chills, nervousness, depression,
dizziness, head- and stomach-aches)
- Weight loss (produced through sweating, the energy expended
to produce sweating, and through direct excretion of fat)
- Auto accident-related soft tissue injury (daily sessions
used until best healing attained, then used to deal with permanent
residuals; pain control for chronic residuals lasted three
days before another treatment was necessary)
Speculation about Infrared Heat Effects on Blood Circulation
All of the following ailments may be associated to some degree
with poor circulation and, thus, may respond well to increased
peripheral dilation associated with infrared treatment:
- Arthritis
- Sciatica
- Backache
- Haemorrhoids
- Nervous tension
- Diabetes
- Children's overtired muscles
- Varicose veins
- Neuritis
- Bursitis
- Rheumatism
- Strained muscles
- Fatigue
- Stretch marks
- Menstrual cramps
- Upset stomach
- Leg and decubitus ulcers (that fail to heal using conventional
approaches)
- Post-operative oedema (treatment has proven so effective
hospital stays were reduced by 25 percent)
- Peripheral occlusive disease ("The goal is to maintain
an optimal blood flow rate to the affected part...In general
the temperature should be maintained at the highest level,
which does not increase the circulatory discrepancy as shown
by cyanosis and pain." Therapeutic Heat and Cold, pp.456-457.)
Infrared Heat and Coronary Artery Disease, Arteriosclerosis,
and Hypertension
Finnish researchers, reporting the regular use of conventional
saunas state "there is abundant evidence to suggest that
blood vessels of regular sauna-goers remain elastic and pliable
longer due to the regular dilation and contraction" of blood
vessels induced by sauna use, such as the Physiotherm Far Infrared
Sauna.
In 1989, German medical researchers reported in "Dermatol
Monatsschrift" a single whole-body session of infrared-induced
hyperthermia lasting over one hour had only beneficial effects
on subjects with State I and II essential hypertension. Each
subject experienced a rise in core body temperature to a maximum
level of 35.5 degrees Celsius (100.5 Fahrenheit). All of the
subjects in one experiment had significant decreases in arterial,
venous, and mean blood pressure that lasted for at least 24 hours
and linked, according to researchers, to a persistent peripheral
dilation effect. An improvement in plasma viscosity was also
noted.
Another group of similar hypertensive patients was also studied
under the same conditions of hyperthermia, with an eye toward
more carefully evaluating the circulatory system effects induced
by this type of whole-body heating. During each infrared session,
there was a significant decrease of blood pressure, cardiac ejection
resistance, and total peripheral resistance in every subject.
There was also a significant increase of the subjects' heart
rates, stroke volumes, cardiac outputs, and ejection fractions.
The researchers site these last three effects as evidence that
the stimulation of the heart during infrared-induced hyperthermia
is well compensated, while the prior list of effects show clear
detail of the microcirculatory changes leading to the desired
result of a lowering blood pressure.
Aging and Infrared Heat Therapy
Problems often accompanying aging have been reported in Japan
to be alleviated or reduced by the use of infrared therapy:
- Menopause
- Cold hands and feet (a physical therapist found 20 to 50
percent improvement was maintained).
- High blood pressure (in the case of a diabetic a systolic
decrease from 180 to 125 and a concurrent 10 pound weigh loss)
Rheumatoid arthritis (seven out of seven cases resolved in
one clinical trial)
- Radiation sickness (relieved signs and symptoms)
- Cancer pain (greatly relived pain in later stages)
- Sequelae of strokes (Herniparesis relieved over time)
- Benign prostatic hypertrophy (reduced)
- Duodenal ulcers (eliminated)
- Pain preventing sleep or limiting sleeping position (relieved)
- Compression fracture pain (pain gone for three days after
each treatment in osteoporotic compression fractures) Haemorrhoids
(reduced)
- Cystitis (gone)
- Cirrhosis of the liver (reversed)
- Gastritis (relieved)
- Hepatitis (gone)
- Asthma, bronchitis (cleared up)
- Chron's Disease (gone)
- Post-surgical adhesions (reduced)
- Leg ulcers (healed when previously static and resistant to
other care)
- Keloids (significantly softened and, in some cases, completely
gone)
Ear, Nose, and Throat Conditions Relieved with Infrared
Heat
In Japan, ear, nose, and throat conditions were relieved with
infrared heat treatments:
- Chronic middle-ear inflammation or infection (in one study
of chronic serous otitis media no pathogenic bacteria were
isolated in 70 percent of the subjects studied after the use
of heat)
- Sore throats
- Tinnitus (chronic severe case cleared with 10 infrared treatments)
- Nose bleeding (reduced)
- Infrared Heat Improved Skin Conditions
- Infrared therapy is used routinely in burn units throughout
Asia.
- Skin conditions improved in Japan and China with the use
of infrared heat application
- Nettle rash
- Clogged pores (unplugged of cosmetics, unexcelled skin texture
and tone)
- Poor skin tone (restored to a more youthful level)
- Scars and pain from burns or wounds (decreased in severity
and extent)
- Lacerations (healed quicker with less pain and scarring)
Acne (three to four treatments may open pores that have been
non-functioning for years, forcing out clogging cosmetics,
and loosening dry outer skin)
- Teenage skin problems (clearing acne and blackheads) Body
odour (improved functioning of the skin especially body odour
induced by occupational exposure to odorous chemicals) Eczema
and Psoriasis (respond well)
- Sunburn (According to the Clayton's Electrotherapy, 9th Edition, "infrared
radiations are the only antidote to excessive ultraviolet radiations.")
- Ketoids (form at a reduced rate in those prone to their formation
and may be softened by infrared heat if they have formed) Dandruff
(increased blood flow through the scalp)
Mikkel Aaland's book Sweat (Capra Press, 1978) quotes a Finnish
doctor:
"The best dressed foreigner can come into a doctor's office, and when
his skin is examined, it is found to be rough as bark. On the other hand, as
a result of the sauna, the skin of any Finnish worker is supple and healthy."
Contraindications
As you can see, the segment of the infrared spectrum emitted
by an infrared Addheat’s Far Infrared Heated Garment is reputed
to offer an astounding range of possible therapeutic benefits
and effects in research conducted around the world.
However, the data presented in this article is offered for reference
purposes only and to stimulate further observation. No implication
of Addheat’s Far Infrared Heated Garment creating a cure for
or treating any disease is implied nor should it be inferred.
If you have a disease, be sure to consult with a primary-care
physician concerning it.
Prescription Drugs: If you are using prescription drugs, check
with your physician or pharmacist for possible changes in the drug's effect
due to an interaction with infrared energy.
Certain Ailments: According to some authorities, it is considered
inadvisable to raise the core temperature of someone with adrenal suppression,
systemic lupus erythematosus, or multiple sclerosis.
Joint Problems: If a person has a recent (acute) joint injury,
it should not be heated for the first 48 hours or until the hot and swollen
symptoms subside. Joints that are chronically hot and swollen may respond poorly
to vigorous heating of any kind. Vigorous heating is strictly contraindicated
in cases of enclosed infections be they dental, in joints, or in any other
tissues.
Pregnancy: In pregnancy or the suspicion of pregnancy, discontinuation
of sauna use is recommended. Finnish women use traditional saunas that don't
heat the body as deeply as an infrared sauna for only six to twelve minutes
and reportedly leave at that time due to perceived discomfort. Their usage
of traditional saunas at this low level of intensity is not linked to birth
defects. Infrared sauna use may be two to three times more intense due to deep
tissue penetration, and comparatively shorter two to six minute sessions hardly
seem worth any minimal risk they may present.
Surgical Implants: Metal pins, rods, artificial joints, or
any other surgical implants generally reflect infrared rays and are not heated
by an infrared heat system. Nevertheless, a person should consult his or her
surgeon before receiving such therapy. Certainly infrared therapy must be discontinued
if a person experiences pain near any implants.
Silicone: Silicone does absorb infrared energy. Implanted
silicone or silicone prostheses for nose or ear replacement may be warmed by
infrared rays. Since silicone melts at over 200 degrees Celsius, it should
not be adversely affected by an infrared heat system, however. It is still
advised that a person checks with his or her surgeon, and possibly are presentative
of the product manufacturer, to be certain.
Menstruation: Heating of the low-back area of women during
the menstrual period may temporarily increase menstrual flow. Once a woman
is aware that this is occurring, she can choose to allow herself to experience
this short-term effect without worry. Or she may simply avoid using an infrared
heat source at that time in her cycle.
Haemorrhage: Haemophiliacs and anyone predisposed to haemorrhage
should avoid infrared usage or any type of heating that would induce vasodilatation
that can lead to the tendency to bleed.
Worsened Condition: Should any condition worsen with the use
of an infrared heat system, the use of the system should be discontinued.
Pain: Pain should not be experienced when using an infrared
heat system. If one does, the use of radiant heat is clearly inappropriate
for the person at that time.
Do not attempt to self-treat any disease with a Addheat’s Heated
Product Line without direct supervision of a physician.
Research on Far Infrared Rays by Dr. Aaron M. Flickstein
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