Heat Baths Salt Lake City UT

Moist or dry, both types of heat provide many of the same benefits. The skin enjoys increased blood flow (and a healthy glow), your pores get cleared of all the grime that’s settled in, and the sweating provides a deep level of detoxification. Spending time in the sauna or steam room reduces stress; relieves the pain of sore muscles, arthritis, and fibromyalgia; and allows you to completely relax.

Bath Doctors
(801) 352-1111
140 West Angelo Avenue
Salt Lake City, UT
 
Craftsman Kitchens & Baths
(801) 293-8001
3591 S 300 W
Salt Lake City, UT
 
Chris And Dick'S Cabinets And Countertops
(801) 972-8815
1499 W 3500 S
Salt Lake City, UT
 
Binns Dayle Plumbing Inc
(801) 266-3285
4455 Garden Dr
Salt Lake City, UT
 
Ed Gardner Plumbing
(801) 486-3588
328 Anderson Ave
Salt Lake City, UT
 
Bath Doctors
(801) 518-1685
1109 East 8215 South
Sandy, UT
 
Icon Remodeling
(801) 485-9209
1448 E 2700 S
Salt Lake City, UT
 
Accent Surfaces
(801) 269-0701
4103 S 500 W
Salt Lake City, UT
 
Maxfield Plumbing & Sprinkler Supply
(801) 937-4722
2320 Murray Holladay Rd
Salt Lake City, UT
 
Brighton Plumbing
(801) 942-2723
7483 Brighton Way
Salt Lake City, UT
 

Rejuvenating Heat Baths

Provided by: 

By Linda Martin

In heated little rooms, Finns gave birth, American Indians experienced spiritual cleansing, and the Romans scrubbed their bodies after a tough day building the empire. We know them as saunas and steam baths, Middle Easterners call them hammam, and the Russians love their banya—all hot boxes that serve to ease stiff muscles, soothe away arthritic pains, lift the spirit, relax the mind, and cleanse the body. In India, ayurvedic physicians use heat in their panchakarma practices to prepare the body for cleansing by dilating the channels of circulation and enabling the toxins to leave the body more readily. Simple fact: Sweating is good for you.

Choose your method
Within minutes of stepping into a sauna, you begin to sweat, but because of the dry air—heated to up to 200 degrees—your perspiration evaporates almost instantly. To keep the heat up in a sauna, you must splash the rocks with water periodically, which creates a burst of steam—boosting air temperature.

In a steam room, on the other hand, your skin drips with perspiration—like it does on a humid Midwestern summer’s day—and the air gets so steamy you can only catch glimpses of the tile-walled room that encloses the moist heat. Less intense than a sauna, the heat in a steam room hovers around 110 to 116 degrees. You needn’t do anything to regulate the heat, which comes from steam generators, housed outside the room.

What are they good for?

Moist or dry, both types of heat provide many of the same benefits. The skin enjoys increased blood flow (and a healthy glow), your pores get cleared of all the grime that’s settled in, and the sweating provides a deep level of detoxification. Spending time in the sauna or steam room reduces stress; relieves the pain of sore muscles, arthritis, and fibromyalgia; and allows you to completely relax.

It works like this: The heart pumps faster, blood vessels dilate, the skin turns red, and sweat surges. Pores open and the body drips in an attempt to cool down. Some experts claim that the skin acts as a “third kidney” and excretes, along with perspiration, small amounts of toxins such as mercury, copper, lead, and zinc. John Longhurst, MD, director of the Susan Samueli Center for Integrative Medicine at the University of California, Irvine, recommends steam baths in particular for respiratory ailments like asthma, colds, and sinus congestion. A bonus for women: The heat often relieves menstrual cramps.

How to do it right
In order to reap the benefits, pay attention to these caveats:
• Don’t stay too long in a steam bath or sauna—about 20 minutes is plenty; otherwise you’ll lose too much fluid. Drink plenty of water—before, during, and after—to prevent dehydration.
• “Maintain self-referral and listen to the needs of your body,” advises David Simon, MD, cofounder and medical director of the Chopra Center for Well Being. “Steam therapy is not a competitive activity.”
• Mix it up. Some hearty bathers alternate heat with cold, takin...

Author: Linda Martin

Copyright 1999-2009 Natural Solutions: Vibrant Health, Balanced Living/Alternative Medicine/InnoVisi...

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