The Dr. Hyman Show - The Science Behind Cold And Heat Therapy And How To Do It For Maximum Benefit with Dr. Susanna Søberg
Episode Date: April 5, 2023This episode is brought to you by Rupa Health, Cozy Earth, BiOptimizers, and InsideTracker. Cold-water immersion and heat therapy are among the biggest wellness trends of the past few years, but they ...have a long-standing tradition of being practiced around the world. Today, I’m excited to sit down with Dr. Susanna Søberg to discuss the benefits of cold and heat therapy and how they have the potential to activate our longevity pathways. Dr. Susanna Søberg is a Ph.D. in metabolism and specializes in functional breathing and cold and heat exposure for health optimization. She is the Founder and CEO of The Soeberg Institute, where she teaches how to "stress up to stress down" using natural stressors. Her scientific discoveries have shown the minimum threshold for how much cold and heat we need to reap the health benefits. She is an international author of Winter Swimming, a number-one bestseller on Amazon. Her book has been translated into 13 languages. This episode is brought to you by Rupa Health, Cozy Earth, BiOptimizers, and InsideTracker. Rupa Health is a place where Functional Medicine practitioners can access more than 2,000 specialty lab tests from over 35 labs. Check out a free, live demo with a Q&A or create an account at RupaHealth.com. Get 40% off your Cozy Earth sheets at cozyearth.com. Use the code MARK40. BiOptimizers is offering my listeners 10% off Sleep Breakthrough. If you buy two or more you’ll get a free bottle of Magnesium Breakthrough. This is a limited-time offer. Go to sleepbreakthrough.com/hyman. Use the code hyman10. InsideTracker is offering my community 20% off at insidetracker.com/drhyman. Here are more details from our interview (audio version / Apple Subscriber version): How hot and cold therapy increases health and longevity (5:08 / 3:19) The physiological effects of cold therapy (11:05 / 8:37) The cognitive and mental health benefits of cold therapy (20:40 / 18:40) How cold therapy activates brown fat (31:06 / 26:50) Cold therapy for pain reduction (37:48 / 33:33) Cold therapy best practices (41:54 / 37:40) Is hot and cold therapy better in tandem? (1:00:49 / 53:30) The physiological effects of hot therapy (1:03:57 / 56:42) How much time should you spend in the sauna? (1:13:30 / 1:09:17) Benefits of infrared saunas and hot baths (1:16:58 / 1:12) Research mentioned in this episode Get a copy of Susanna’s book, Winter Swimming: The Nordic Way Towards a Healthier and Happier Life. Get a 10% discount on her three-week online Thermalist course with code HYMAN at https://www.soeberginstitute.com/course/live-thermalist.
Transcript
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Coming up on this episode of The Doctor's Pharmacy.
You can go into something this simple, cold water.
You have an increased focus, increased drive,
which will give you motivation for the rest of the day
to pursue whatever you want to do.
And you get a more positive angle to your life even
because you also increase oxytocin,
which is also a stress hormone.
It's also what we call the love hormone.
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Welcome to The Doctor's Pharmacy. I'm Dr. Mark Hyman. That's pharmacy with an F,
a place for conversations that matter. And if you've ever heard about hot and cold therapy,
the benefits of saunas, cold plunges, you're a little confused about what it is, why it works,
why you should do it or why you shouldn't do it. You're going to love this podcast because it's
with the world's expert on hot and cold therapy, Susanna Soberg, who is a PhD in metabolism.
She specializes in functional breathing, cold, and heat exposure for health optimization.
She's the founder and the CEO of the Soberg Institute, where she teaches how to stress
up to stress down.
And you might have heard me talking about hormesis in my recent podcast, little stresses
that doesn't kill you, that makes you stronger.
Well, this is exactly what we're talking about.
And it's using natural stressors to activate your body's own innate healing systems.
She's created an incredible amount of research looking at what we need to do, how we need to do
what, what works, what doesn't work, what it does to our bodies, what's the minimum amount, how much
cold, how much heat to get all the benefits. We're going to talk about all that today, getting to the
nitty gritty. She's an international author of Winter Swimming,
which sounds like a hard sell to people.
Okay, let's go winter swimming.
But anyway, much better hot swimming
in the beach in the summer,
which was actually a number one bestseller,
so people must have loved it.
It's translated into 13 languages,
and we are gonna get deep into the science
of hormesis, hot and cold therapy,
what to do, how to do it,
and why it is so important for your health.
It's why I actually included a whole chapter on hormesis in my book, Young Forever, which
if you haven't gotten a copy, you already get a copy.
So welcome.
Welcome, Susanna.
Thank you very much, so much for inviting me as well.
And thank you for that lovely introduction.
I'll see if I can live up to it at least.
Okay.
Well, you know, you're in Denmark,
which is definitely a cold place in many parts of the year. And you've somehow found your way
to study this topic, which was sort of like, I would say, not much attention was paid to it
throughout medical science. And yet you've kind of created a career out of understanding the biology of what happens
and why it's so important.
So let's talk about this because it seems like cold plunges are the latest craze.
Saunas are popping up everywhere.
It's a huge wellness trend, but it's something that's been around for a long time.
I mean, Native American sweat lodges, the Finnish saunas, the polar bear club. I mean, it's kind of for a long time. I mean, Native American sweat lodges, the Finnish saunas,
the polar bear club. I mean, it's kind of been a fun thing. I actually went to Antarctica and I
jumped in the Antarctic Ocean. It was very, very cold. I stayed in for a minute or two.
They had me by a rope in case I froze to death and they would pull me out. but I managed to get out. Thank you.
So tell us how to, just at a high level,
how does cold and hot therapy have this massive potential
to increase our health and our longevity even
as a kind of strategy for enhancing our well-being and our lifespan?
Yeah, I love that question.
It's a really good question.
Taking it from the top, just actually, why should we actually do this?
And why is it good for us?
So overall said that I think that down the road, when I have read a lot of literature
and also done my studies, I kind of realized that this is actually a good way to prevent
lifestyle diseases.
So it protects the body from getting inflamed.
It protects the body.
Inflamed.
Thank you.
It protects from inflammation.
That's right.
I don't speak any Danish, so you're doing great.
Thank you.
Yeah.
So inflammation will decrease when you stress the body, whether you stress it in a
cold way with cold stress or with heat stress, you will lower the inflammation if you continue
doing this. So from the first time that you go, you will already be starting this process because
you are creating what you just mentioned before, the hormetic stress in the cells, which builds the
cells stronger, but also the whole system is going to
be activated your immune system and more white blood cells will come out in your system because
of the shock and also the stress hormones and which eventually also them because of the increase in
metabolism which i know we will get back to that what is that and how does that work? But all in all, this will lower your inflammation in the body and it will lower your stress level.
So you will have a lower blood pressure.
You have a lower heart rate.
And you have done this for a while.
And that is actually what we measure as an outcome for having a risk for cardiovascular diseases and lifestyle diseases, such as type 2 diabetes,
but also inflammation is associated with neurological diseases, such as depression
and Alzheimer's disease. So what I wanted to do in my studies and why I actually went back to
university after working at the hospital, I was like, okay, so many sick people here and the pile is getting bigger. I wanted to go around that pile and see if I could find out some way to give people some
advice.
So this, I don't know, this pile doesn't get bigger.
I just wanted to figure out if I could give advice before they actually get sick so we
could prevent disease and what keeps people healthy.
So hormetic stress was actually what I went for.
So, yeah, the brown fat, which I know we will get into,
but this could prevent lifestyle diseases and mental diseases.
I mean, this is just remarkable what you're saying.
Essentially, there's this simple, basically free, almost free therapy
that has the potential to deal with inflammation in the body,
which we now know is the biggest driver for almost all chronic diseases, not to mention
autoimmunity, not to mention aging itself as an inflammatory disease. And so we have this
incredible technology that's been around for thousands of years that we've been using to help
our bodies stay healthy. And I think of these as survival pathways.
When we were in these non-perfectly thermoregulated environments when we were out there hunting
and gathering and we didn't have 68 degree temperature controlled environments all the
time.
And we had to deal with these extreme temperatures of heat and cold.
And when we had that, it seems to activate this ancient longevity pathway.
And I think the inflammation story is so important.
You mentioned mental health because it's not just increasing dopamine and other neurotransmitters.
Actually, your brain is inflamed when you're depressed.
And so this is actually an interesting doorway.
And I just want to share a little anecdote.
I'm going to get more into the details.
I had chronic fatigue syndrome when I was in my 30s from mercury poisoning.
And I was really sick.
I was super inflamed. My gut was inflamed. My muscles were inflamed. I had myositis. I had brain fog. I had constant aching and pain everywhere. And I was just this mess of
inflammation. And one of the only things that could actually help me get relief for a short
period of time was doing a sauna and a cold plunge or doing them over and over again. And it was kind
of like a miracle drug that nothing else worked. It wasn't curing me, but it literally helped me
get some relief. So I know from firsthand experience, I mean, it's great to do when you
feel healthy already and it just enhances your health. But even if you're already sick like I was, it was such a powerful intervention.
And it really is something I've used for decades to help me stay healthy, feel good, to reset my nervous system and to change my biology.
So it's super powerful.
I completely understand.
I mean, did you have pain relief also?
Absolutely.
Pain relief.
My brain fog lifted. my muscles stopped hurting.
I felt like a normal human being for a few hours afterwards.
Wow.
And then my, you know, my mercury poisoning, I had to deal with the mercury, the cause
of it all.
But eventually I, you know, it was so powerful.
Now, I kind of want to get into the science of this.
We're going to get into hot and we're getting into cold, but we'll start with cold.
You're really one of the leading researchers in this, if not the top researcher. So let's break down what happens in your body
when you go into cold immersion, and what are the effects on your biology? And we'll go through all
of them, including physical and mental. But I also want you to talk about what is the right
temperature and dose? Because I think people are like, oh, that's scary. I don't you to talk about what is the right temperature and dose?
Because I think people are like, oh, that's scary.
I don't want to do that.
But actually, it may not be as much as we think we need.
So let's talk about the science of it.
What does it do to us?
And then let's talk about the drug dose and delivery and the duration.
Yeah, let's do that.
Yeah, let's have it as a cliffhanger for now.
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah.
So, okay.
So let's start with what happens when you go into the cold water.
So as soon as actually you stand there on the jetty or on the beach or wherever you plunge in your cold plunge in your garden, as soon as you take off your robe, off your clothes, you will stand there in the cold wind and you will have an activation of your, starting your activation of your sympathetic nervous system,
so your fight or flight system,
because the cold receptors on your skin
is going to send a signal to your brain
in your temperature regulating center in the hypothalamus
where there will be this center
which always regulate and sense
whether you are getting a little bit too hot
or a little bit too cold.
And from that, it would send out these signals, so stress neurotransmitters in the brain,
but also hormones, which are noradrenaline and adrenaline, cortisol, also a little bit,
not so much actually, but it's going to activate your stress system.
And that's going to make your heart rate goes up a little bit,
but also your blood pressure just a bit.
It's not much.
It's just between 11 to 19 millimeter mercury.
Thank you.
And which is not so much.
And studies actually shows that this only happens with the heart rate going up
and also the blood pressure going up a little bit.
Only happens if you are a new winter swimmer.
And when I say winter swimmer, it's just because that is the term I use the most here in Denmark.
Because that's what we call it.
But what I really mean is cold water immersion.
You could call it plunging.
It's just going into cold water and you can use the way you want to, what suits you in your life.
But here in denmark
we have the open sea so we call it winter swimming and that is why my book is called that
just to explain the terms so okay so you have an activation of your sympathetic nervous system
when you're new it's more of course and when you then when you first start when you first start
practicing cold immersion therapy
you start having you have a more extreme reaction in your physiology exactly and that's of course
going to activate when you then go into the water that's going to activate full on your sympathetic
nervous system but because of the diving response when you submerge your body into the cold water up
to the neck it's going to activate your diving response.
And what's that?
Your diving response is because you submerge the body into cold water,
and that's going to activate your parasympathetic nervous system.
So it's actually also your vagus nerve.
So that's going to make your system go a little bit into a conflict.
So the heart rate really wants to go up because of the activation of
the sympathetic nervous system, but the diving response because of the activation of the
digestive system will make the heart rate and blood pressure go down. So there's a little bit of
a stress in the body in the first half a minute to a minute around that time, especially if you
are new to this.
So if you are trained and you have done this for a while, your body gets more adapted to it and you
won't have as much of an activation of the sympathetic nervous system as you would if you
were completely new. So you'd have more of a parasympathetic response if you were doing it
over a period of time. Yeah, exactly. So you get adapted to this. And that's also because of some physiological processes that is happening in the body. And you can divide them into three processes, which is the metabolic process where the activation of the brown fat in the body is this healthy kind of fat that we have. I'm not going to go completely into that right now because it's
not... We're going to come back to brown fat. Yeah, we are. We are. But that's... It's a good
kind of fat. It's a good kind of fat. Yeah, it's a good fat. And then there's the bad fat. That is
the white fat. And we want to activate the good fat so we can get rid of some of the white fat.
So that's a good thing when you go into the cold water and you activate your sympathetic nervous
system because that is going to increase your adrenaline. Activate the brown water and you activate your sympathetic nervous system because that is going to increase
no adrenaline, activate the brown fat, and then you heat up. We're going to go more into that.
Okay. But that's one of the- Well, here's the, just to stop for a sec. So just to unpack it
because you're going fast. So the diving response essentially is to help you survive if you fall in
cold water because it slows everything down and slows your metabolism down and slows your heart
rate down.
It's why people who have hypothermia, even when they seem to be near death, can be revived because everything kind of is conserved.
Yes. Right. So that's actually a good thing.
It is a good thing. That's because it's cold.
Yeah. Yeah. But that's sort of what the diving response is for people who don't know what that is.
And it's a powerful survival mechanism.
It is exactly. Yeah.
So the diving response only activates when you submerge into water.
So not in the cold shower, for example.
And so when you do that, you have this activation of
your all your neurotransmitters in the brain and you will have this
activation of the parasympathetic nervous system if you are able to stay there longer than the cold shock. And when that subsides,
it takes about a minute or two, then you will have the full activation of the parasympathetic
nervous system. And if you can get over to that and you can sit long enough in the water for that,
you have to rehearse that.
People should go very slow and this is not what you do.
The first 30 seconds of the harvest and then it gets easier.
Yes, then it gets easier.
But it goes quick, actually.
Studies show that already after the third time, actually, you go into cold water.
And this has been tested in studies where they took subjects and put them into water.
And already after the third time, they could see a lower hyperventilation in the subject. So they
found that they didn't hyperventilate as much. So the heart rate and blood pressure went down.
It's also because people get a little bit anxious about going into the
water. What is this? Is it dangerous or is it? So, yeah. So the first thing that happens is
the activation of your autonomic nervous system. And then the metabolism, the brown fat is the
next part, right? So then tell us about the brown fat, what it does, why we have it,
why it's important because, you know, there's a fascinating group of Tibetan practices called Tummo.
You probably know about this, right?
Tummo, you know about the Tummo practices?
The drying of the sheets.
So the Tibetan monks, when they would go through their initiation,
who lived up high in the Himalayas,
they would have these sheets dipped in ice water in the cold Himalayan winters,
and they would be wrapped themselves in the ice sheets, and they would have to meditate
and activate their brown fat. Of course, they didn't know they were doing that. They were
doing ancient breathing and breath practices, activated their own fat and dried the sheets
on their body. And then once they got good at that, they were actually given the opportunity
to go up into the snow basically
with just underwear on and a loincloth and have to sit overnight and and keep themselves warm
overnight in the winter so that's the power we have within us that people don't realize you
didn't know about this i don't i didn't know that story actually oh my god it's amazing it's amazing
you should google it drive it's called drying of the sheets or tummo. It's an ancient Tibetan practice.
It sounds like it's about the brown fat because it's not like you can say.
So intuitively, we have known about how the body works and how we can heat up from the inside.
We just didn't have the science around it.
If you look back to our ancient Greeks, so Hippocrates and Socrates, they said that they advised people to go into the cold
water and go into the hot water because that's going to make your blood or your fluence,
what is it called? Fluence, your body fluence.
Yeah, your body fluence float easily in the body if you do that. So they didn't really know exactly.
They didn't have the science to back up what they were really saying,
but they kind of intuitively knew that this was already going on.
So it sounds like this story you're telling is because people can feel
that they heat up when they get cold.
That is also what my science show, that you actually get physically warmer
from activating your brown fat and doing this kind of activity going into the cold and going into the heat.
But you get warmer.
Yeah, it's true.
It's only, you know, Seneca, 2000 years ago, was a Stoke philosopher.
I was a cold water enthusiast.
He inaugurated the first of every year with a cold plunge in the Virgo aqueduct.
And Thomas Jefferson used a cold foot bath every morning for 60 years
and died at 83, which was old back then.
So it's fascinating that there's actually,
Hippocrates also talked about cold plungers.
This is not a new idea.
It's not a new idea.
They call this thermalism.
That's why I actually call my school, my course,
I call it Thermalist and Thermalism Cure because, yeah, because
that's a tribute to them because they already then saw this.
And today we have some signs to back it up.
But so you have this parasympathetic sympathetic shift in your body and that actually, even
though it seems like a stress, eventually it actually can help your nervous system calm
way down.
Right. And and mitigate the effects of stress. Even though it seems like a stress, eventually it actually can help your nervous system calm way down.
Right. And and mitigate the effects of stress.
I want to come to the brown fat. I want to talk about this inflammation and also the mental health part, because I think that's important.
And we'll dive deep into the metabolism conversation. So with the cold plunge, you get a release of other neurotransmitters and it changes your cognitive performance and your mental health.
And can you talk about that?
And then we're going to talk about inflammation.
Then we're talking about brown fat.
OK, great.
So the mental health part. But yeah, so what is great, or you can say what we actually need today is to learn how to stress up to stress down.
And that is what happens when you go into the cold waters.
So what happens is you get this increase of neurotransmitters in the brain, of no adrenaline,
which gives you focus and drive.
And it actually increases up to 2.5 fold within just a few minutes.
And I think that is amazing.
And we knew this already back in the 70s, which is shown in studies, old physiology
studies back then.
So it's not kind of like new news or anything.
It's just that today we can take the science together and we can make a better picture
around what actually is going on in the body when we put this together,
also together with my research, which I published a year ago.
But what it shows is that you have this increase in noradrenaline and you have more focus,
you have more drive because you also increase dopamine.
And dopamine also increases 2.5 full of baseline.
Wow, amazing.
Yeah, it's amazing.
It's like taking a Ritalin, basically.
Yes.
Right?
It is, yeah.
And I don't know.
I don't know.
What, you don't take Ritalin?
No, exactly.
I'm like, I'm saying yes.
And people will be like, what?
No, no.
From an academic perspective, it's the same mechanism as really.
We have read this.
Or cocaine. Or cocaine, right?
Yeah. Yeah, exactly.
And it's much safer for you.
It's much safer.
Yeah. So I think it's amazing that you can go into something this simple, cold water, and you can dip yourself there, you have an increased focus, increased drive,
which would give you motivation for the rest of the day to pursue whatever you want to do.
And you get a more positive angle to your life even because you also increase oxytocin,
which is also a stress hormone. It's also what we call the log hormone. But it increases your
way of viewing your life also so this is the gratitude
that you can feel when you go into the cold war i don't know if you feel that but but definitely
this is what i hear so i'm definitely grateful when i get out yeah
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discount code in your cart but altogether when you go into the cold water, what it does for you
collectively, it opens, it widens your window for stress, actually. So that is a process when you go
into the cold water and you can relax in a situation which is super stressful for you.
And you can use this and practice in the, I call it a cold water training center for your
nervous system, because this is really where you can try and open up this window a bit more. So
you don't get as easily stressed in your everyday life. I'm not saying that we are not overstressed,
but maybe our window for stress has also narrowed. It has narrowed also. So maybe if we can open that window and we can tolerate stress
a bit better mentally, then we would also not have as much mouth breathing society,
which we have today. And when you breathe through your mouth, you activate your sympathetic nervous
system, right? And that's going to also affect your mental health. So it's
like you're stressing yourself. It becomes this vicious cycle. So you can use the cold for your,
to, you could say, create a better mental balance for yourself, not only just in the moment,
because in the moment you will completely forget about your worries because the body goes into
a moment of just survival.
Even though you did it on purpose, the body is going to react that way.
But you can use it.
You can use that reaction to completely delete whatever was on your plate.
It's a great reset.
It's an incredible reset.
It is.
It is.
I call it the control-alt-delete effect because that's exactly what it does.
Oh, my God.
That is so good control alt delete
so you can control alt delete all of your stress response and come into a calmer nervous system
state that allows you to be more focused present happier increases all the happy mood chemicals
love chemicals and it's really quite remarkable and it's And it's something that happens pretty quickly.
It happens so rapidly, within a few minutes, actually.
So if you can stay in the water for just getting over to the other side, I call it the cold shop, where you stop hyperventilating and you can relax in the water.
You don't really have to stay there much longer.
You have already the benefits, right? So you can go up and what happened there is you completely deleted your worries and you then have a new mindset. Your brain is full of all these
good chemicals and that is going to make you view your problems, your life, everything, nature,
people around you in another perspective, because now you have this positive
mind, right? And that's how you go into life. So if you can do this a couple of times a week,
imagine how that's going to affect your life. If you on purpose can go out and take this happiness
pill, it's just cold water. Well, it's like a stress resilience, right? It's like,
think about if you had to never exercise and you're a couch potato and had to go hike 10 miles,
it would be a really hard thing to do. And if you are constantly in a state of stress,
that is psychological stress, but you don't have a way to reset your nervous system
and become adapted to it, you don't develop stress resilience, right? You can develop exercise
resilience where you can be fit and exercise, it doesn't bother you. Whereas if you don't develop stress resilience right you can develop exercise resilience where you can be fit
and exercise it doesn't bother you whereas if you don't have that it's going to bother you the same
thing with what you're talking about it's a way of building stress resilience in our life so we can
handle more stresses over time and not be so buffeted around by all the difficult things in
our in our life yeah exactly and i think one like thing that we can we can point to, which it's very difficult to prove how do you get more stress resilient with this.
But I think one thing we can point to as a kind of proof to this is that we have found in my studies that you actually get warmer from going into the cold water so becoming a winter swimmer cold plunger dipper whatever we
call it um you become a warmer person meaning that you will be more comfortable in the cold
and i as myself can completely vouch for that because i was definitely a person who was a bit
of a i call myself a cold sissy back then um but today i am am not. Today, I'm completely, I would say, I don't fancy the
cold and I don't think anybody should actually. That would be really weird. But I like the cold
today because I know what it can do for me. And a cold wind today doesn't bother me as much as it did when I wasn't going to swim. So my stress resilience against temperature changes has actually changed.
So it doesn't bother me as much anymore.
So I think that is one thing that we can point out and say, well, that's just a physical thing.
So imagine what is actually also happening in your mind.
Yeah.
And also, you know, what's interesting is a lot of mental health
problems are problems of inflammation in the brain. So depression is inflammation of the brain.
You touched on it earlier. ADD is inflammation. Autism is inflammation. Alzheimer's inflammation
in the brain, right? So a lot of the things that are going on in the brain mood-wise are inflammation
as well as sort of all the other chronic diseases.
So can you talk about the role of cold therapy for inflammation in general and what it does and what the mechanisms of action are and how it works?
So now we want to talk about the brown fat because that is what we activate when we go into the cold water.
So the brown fat, I'm just going to repeat a bit because yeah, I didn't really say it all. Yeah. So when you go into the cold water, as I told you,
you activate the cold receptors in the skin and that's going to send a signal to the brain and
that's going to release noradrenaline, which is a stress hormone. And that's going to activate
our healthy brown fat. And that's located, you can almost touch it actually it's underneath your clavicular bones
and i measured it in my studies it's just at like one to two millimeters under your skin so you can
almost touch it actually um yeah exactly and that's the largest depot there are six places
in the body where this with this it's actually an organ it's it's it's You can define it as an organ. It's six places, but it's around the central nervous system.
And it makes sense.
We have as fine system.
It's around your back too, right?
Yeah.
Between your shoulder blades and your back.
Yeah.
So down the spine and under your supraglibicular bones, on your, what is this bone called?
The sternum.
The sternum.
The sternum bone.
Yeah, exactly.
And also a little bit around the
kidneys and a little bit around the heart, which makes sense. So the purpose of the brown fat is
to keep you warm. And this is, of course, developed during evolution and to keep the human body warm
when we were out there and it was super cold and then it was super hot some other times. But back then, we had the
brown fat to keep us in the perfect regulation all the time and that takes energy. So the brown fat,
when that is activated, it increases our heat in our body, but that takes energy. So that uses
glucose and fat from the bloodstream as fuel to activate it and increase our what's called
thermogenesis but it's also what's called non-shivering thermogenesis meaning that the
muscles are not helping at this point so thermogenesis just means heating up the body so
you can heat up by shaking and shivering or by the activation of this brown fat that's been there for
millions of years yes Yes, exactly.
Thank you.
So it's like the first responder to our body when we get too cold or we get too hot.
But it happens so quick.
We have like 10 times more cold receptors in the skin than we have for heat, for example.
And that is because we can easily die when we fall into cold water.
It makes sense that we have been involved in that way.
That was before climate change.
Yeah, exactly.
And today, we don't get exposed to any temperature changes, right?
So it's like living in these houses, 24 degrees all the time, right?
So the brown fat is going to also be activated directly from the skin.
So there are studies showing, recent studies actually,
showing that there are signals going directly from our skin
and directly to the brown fat without passing the brain.
So there's like two pathways to activate the brown fat immediately,
within seconds, as soon as you get a little bit cold on your skin.
So also when you just go out in a t-shirt and it's cold.
So that increases your metabolism.
That increases your metabolism and actually makes you burn more fat in general.
Like you said, the brown fat activation helps burn the white fat,
which is what we're trying to get rid of.
Yes.
And also it burns your glucose, so your sugar and fat in the bloodstream. So it
doesn't only take the fat that is like on your thighs and on your belly and you want to get rid
of the white fat, right? But it clears up also the glucose and fat that is already floating in your
blood vessels, in your bloodstreams.
So it's going to clean up that and it's going to use from your depots as well.
If you are cold enough or you can say for long enough and you do, for example,
multiple plunges or you also use the sauna, the sauna can do some of these things too.
We need to remember that.
We're going to get to there. We're going to get to there.
We're going to get to that.
Exactly.
Yeah.
That is like the first thing that happens.
So essentially what you're saying is that it helps to regulate one of the biggest problems we're facing in society today, which is insulin resistance, which is problems with our blood sugar and metabolism. I mean, 93.2% of Americans are in poor metabolic
health, which means they're somewhere in the continuum to diabetes. And what you're saying
is that this cold therapy can be an adjunct to lifestyle treatments that actually help to
improve your blood sugar, your blood pressure, your fat burning, your metabolism. It's just fascinating to me, right?
Yeah, exactly. That is what happens down the road when you continue this. And
yeah, so it actually happens from your first plunge. So it's going to do all this acutely,
but eventually... Is there data that, sorry to interrupt, but is there data that show that you can lose weight by doing cold plunges?
No, not on the weight scale, at least.
But we can see in my studies, which we published from Copenhagen University in 2021, that we can increase the brown fat activity and make the brown fat cells more efficient. Because what happens in the brown
fat when you continuously expose yourself to the cold is that it increases mitochondria in the
cells. And the mitochondria are the little energy fabrics that you would like more of, of course,
because that's going to keep you young and keep the cells young and it's going to help the brown fat cell increase more heat in your body and that's going to burn more calories from your body
as well. So the more mitochondria you can build in your brown fat cells, the more efficient they
will be and the more fat and sugar they will burn. And that's going to increase your insulin
sensitivity, which we also found in my studies.
So basically, even though we haven't done the weight loss studies, theoretically, it seems like it actually is increasing your metabolism, which will help you to lose weight and correct the insulin resistance, which will help you even lose weight even more.
So it's sort of an incredible positive feedback loop in terms of energy, in terms of mood, in terms of mitochondria,
in terms of metabolism, in terms of inflammation. What's the mechanism for reducing inflammation?
Because I noticed that if I have pain or stiff or sore, I go into a cold plunge, I come out,
it's just gone. It's quite amazing. It's like taking a bottle full of Advil or something.
Yeah, it's amazing. And actually, it's kind of like really hard to get down to and find in literature the
precise pathway for this and what's actually going on.
But what I have found so far is that, of course, you activate also the IL-6.
So it's like what you also do when you exercise, for example.
But and that is like an...
It's a inflammatory cytokine.
Yeah, exactly. And it's also going to activate IL-10. So it's going to do both, of course,
but because...
Which is an anti-inflammatory cytokine.
Exactly. And because of that, you are going to lower your inflammation. And when you lower your inflammation and you at the same time increase endorphins in your body,
you will have a lower pain in your joints or whatever.
It could be in your leg or where you have your pain.
But it's also because of the more blood circulation that comes to this place where it hurts. And in time, when you continue your
co-plunching, you will have, can you say clean up? I don't know. And because of the increase of
leukosutes and monosutes, which is going to clean up the inflammation, they will come out and like,
exactly. And that's going to take that away from your bigger blood
blood circulation but in the capillaries there you will have more and more blood circulation
and a better vascularity and that's going to relieve the pain also so i think there's more
processes going on here which are a little bit difficult to like come down to and say exactly
what is going on. I think there's multiple things going on, but some of them could be this.
So just basically three things. One is it seems to increase endorphins, which is like
morphine or heroin, the pain relief chemicals you have in your body. It increases the activity of
important cytokines. Cytokines are these inflammatory or immune molecules. And one of them is called IL-10 that reduces inflammation.
And three, it increases initially vasoconstriction, which sort of shuts off blood flow.
But then it actually, the rebound effect, the rebound effect is you get vasodilation
and then you get increased circulation. So there may be like multiple mechanisms to reduce pain.
Multiple mechanisms. But we can also just mention um nitric oxide i think because yeah i think it's an
important one because when you go into the cold that happens also in the heat so we could go back
to that i keep saying that we're gonna get hot in the suit the The nitric oxide is going to increase the blood vessels ability to dilate and contract.
So, and that's going to increase the oxygen delivery to all your cells also in your body.
And that is also a good thing for pain relief.
Yeah.
So nitric oxide is basically, or NO, we did a podcast with Louis Ignaro, who is
the one who won the NILVO prize for discovering this molecule, nitric oxide. Yeah. And he can go
back and listen to that. And it's so important. It can be so effective for many things. He was
even talking about it as a treatment for COVID because of the powerful anti-inflammatory effects.
And so this is something our body makes through breath. If we breathe through our nose, it's really important to breathe through our nose.
If we breathe through our mouth, we don't make nitric oxide. But you're saying that this cold
therapy also will activate nitric oxide, which is a powerful anti-inflammatory compound in our body.
It's so important. It's so cool. All right. All right. So now we're talking about all the benefits,
the brain benefits and mood benefits, the dopamine
chemicals, the stress resilience, the increase in our metabolism, the decrease in inflammation
and pain, all these wonderful things.
Now let's talk about how do we take this drug?
Because it sounds like a miracle drug, right?
What is the best way to do it?
What's the amount of time we should do it?
What's the temperature we should do it? What's the amount of time we should do it? What's the temperature we should
do it at? And what's the difference between a cold shower versus a cold bath versus an ice bath
versus a cryotherapy unit where you can go and stand there? Talk us through all that.
Yeah, I can try. It takes a while. It takes a while. Okay, so if you use the C or the cold plunge, I mean, this is where you can do the same thing, right?
So when you do that, you can, I think it's really important that people do a little bit of breath work before they go into the water.
Because they need to think about their breathing and their nervous system as the steering
for how well your cold plunge is going to be and especially if you're new this is definitely
something you would like to practice before you go into the cold water you don't go back
totally into panic so if you can stand on the jetty or before your plunge and just do some
breathing with your nose so nasal breathing in and out and try to relax if you're standing in a cold wind.
It can be difficult, actually.
And by that, you will lower your stress response.
So you activate your parasympathetic nervous system.
And if you can do that, you, one, rehearse it before you go into the stressful situation
where we would like you to continue
this but also you go into this stressful situation not already very alert so that's not really going
to help you so when you have rehearsed this a bit and you can it can take a few seconds and
and you don't have to stay there for very long but when you can do that if you have relaxed a bit
you exhale completely
before you step in because that's going to make room in your lungs for doing the first like
inhalation and and if you are new and i am especially concerned for the new ones i don't
i want them to have a really good experience so that's why i'm talking to those people yeah yeah
yeah um so if you if you completely exhale you make room in your lungs
more capacity is there right for you to do a like a inhale and you will do that because you
yeah exactly you activate your gasping reflex so you cannot really help that you cannot control it
and when it happens at the first time or the second time maybe. But what you can do...
So if you scream when you jump in the cold water, that's okay.
It's completely okay.
It's completely okay.
I think people will forgive you.
I love that.
But what you can do is you can lower your stress.
When you go into the cold water and you gasp a bit,
just try and remember, just think about your breathing.
So the goal is to do completely nasal
breathing in and out when you're in the water and also during your cold shock response but this is
not going to happen the first time i'm just quickly going to say that but you can try and
rehearse it so if you do a cycling i just i think it's it's it's fine if people do the try to keep
the inhalation through the nose and then out through the mouth.
How many breaths did you take?
Just cycling while you're in there.
Just do it while you're in a cold plunge.
I don't know.
I haven't counted that.
I just try to relax.
Do you want to do it for like a minute or two before you jump in?
Is that the idea?
Oh, you mean on the jetty?
I just think you should stand there for a few, it could be a few seconds or half a minute. It's just until you feel that you have lowered your stress response, especially if you're a little bit anxious about this, try to calm yourself down. to open your window for stress. So it also starts before you go into the water.
So lower your stress response
before you go into the water.
But in the water,
try and see if you can nasal breathe.
But if you can,
then just do the cycle of in through the nose
and out through the mouth,
and then you can switch.
Eventually, when you get more adapted to this,
but it doesn't have to be the first.
So breathing before
and then breathing when you're in there.
Yeah.
And then how long do you stay in and what temperature oh yeah so that depends on where you are so we in denmark in scandinavia we have the nature to completely control what
temperature we have in the sea and i think that's amazing because our water temperature is always cold. So we go down to maybe one degree.
Celsius.
Celsius in January.
But if we, for example, when we start,
like we call it winter swimming or cold water swimming,
we call that from October.
And October is like, that is when the water is going to get colder.
And that's around maybe, it varies a bit,
but maybe it could be 15 or down to nine degrees.
And then in November.
So 15 degrees is Fahrenheit, about 59 is 59 degrees Fahrenheit, right?
Fahrenheit, yeah.
Thank you.
I'm not good with the converting.
That's okay.
That's okay.
I wonder if everybody gets what this is.
There's listeners all over the world, so some are Fahrenheit, some are converting. That's okay. That's okay. We got to make sure everybody gets what this is. There's listeners all over the world.
So some are Fahrenheit, some are Celsius.
Yeah, exactly.
Yeah.
I should memorize this, actually.
I will try.
Yeah.
So when you get into the water, it's not that important exactly what temperature it is, as long as it's just cold water.
You'll be amazed that actually your metabolism is going to be activated also from 20
degrees Celsius, actually. And you don't have to always have the water at one degree if you can
control that in a plunge or something. You can vary the temperature. So just a difference.
Well, you said down to nine. Nine is like 48 degrees. But a lot of these cold plunges go to
40 or something. Yeah so it's not it
doesn't have to be that cold right to really have the same benefit so you don't have to like power
down to like 40 degrees to get the benefit you get more benefit if it's colder so we haven't done any
studies there are no studies showing the the relationship of temperature and activation of
the metabolism and what what will happen down the road if you have like more benefits or if it's
going to stress your body too much we need these studies in the future but what i'm saying is that
it for my study where we had winter swimmers in the ocean here where the temperature from october varied from i think there
is like that there is a table in the book actually where i put it in so people can see what's the
temperature in denmark what are we talking about so it's the book is winter swimming for those who
want to get it winter swimming yeah the book is winter swimming it looks like this is actually
i think amazing so in the yeah so in book, there's a table showing from October
until the season ends in Denmark, which is in April.
So during this time, the temperature is going to be
from 15 or nine, it varies a bit
and then down to one or zero degrees Celsius.
And then it goes up a bit again in February
and also in March a bit.
And then in May, it gets hotter, of course, the water.
But it's not like it's that hot.
I mean, 19 degrees Celsius in the summer, it could be a little bit warmer.
It's still chilly.
And it's going to activate your nervous system.
It's going to activate your metabolism.
So that's interesting.
So then, you know, cold plunges are you know 40 degrees
you can get down to 45 my bathtub i i measured the temperature in the winter in my bathtub i
just put cold water on and it's like 48 it's like 48 degrees which is like nine celsius and so okay
it's pretty cold it's pretty cold yeah and i and so then you're you're in there um and you could do
it in a in a you know in the ocean which was sort of more adventurous you could do it in a, you know, in the ocean, which was sort of more adventurous.
You could do it in a lake.
You could do it in a pond.
You could do it in a river.
Or you can do it like in your bathtub in the winter if you turn on the cold water.
Right?
Just turn on the cold water.
You can actually throw bags of ice in there if you want to make it even colder.
Right?
And then or you can buy one of these fancy cold plungers.
A friend of mine actually, you mine actually bought a horse trough.
It's like where you feed horses water.
And then it's like a big metal tub you can buy for a few bucks at the horse supply store or something.
And then he fills it up with water and then throws a bunch of ice in there.
And it's like how he does it.
So there's a lot of ways to do it.
How long should you stay in?
A minute, two, five, ten minutes?
What's the...
Per session.
Yeah.
So I can tell you what we found in my studies that we performed here in Denmark.
So in my research study from my PhD, we found that 11 minutes, and this was shown in winter swimmers who had already been swimming for a two to three
winter swimming seasons. So they were adapted. I wanted to study the adapted ones because I wanted
to see if they were different from a group of control subjects, right? And I wanted to monitor
how much time do they spend in the water. And I wanted to find out with how little can we get away
with because I was not a winter swimmer myself. I was kind of like most comfortable
people with temperature. I don't like the cold. So I was thinking, I'm pretty much like many other
people. So can we figure out something that is easy to do, but still efficient and efficient
enough? So 11 minutes per week we found and divided on two.
Well, not 11 minutes all at once, but just like 11 minutes per week.
11 minutes per week and not at once, divided on two to three days.
And also per day, we did, at least in this study,
they alternated with cold plungers and the sauna.
So it was this contrast therapy where they started with a cold plunge
and then they went into the sauna and then the cold plunge again, sauna,
and they ended in the cold because I told them that that is how the protocol should be.
Because that's good for you.
I can tell you why.
Yeah, yeah.
We want to talk about that.
Yeah.
But just to add to that.
You're talking about like three to four minutes a day, a time.
It's when you divide 11 by three or four...
Three to four minutes per day, right?
So every plunge should not be more than one to two minutes.
This is what my subject said.
Just one to two minutes, not three or four minutes.
One to two minutes per dip.
Oh, because I put my stopwatch on on i stay in three minutes or four minutes
sometimes well do you also alternate with the sauna yeah yeah well you don't no no you don't
because my studies show that that's good that's contrast so what you should do is you plunge for
one to two minutes and then you go into the sauna. And my protocol also shows that our winter swimmers stayed in total for 57 minutes in the sauna.
So if you divide that also on these days, and if you have, of course, the facilities you can go and alternate,
then you should only stay in the sauna for 10 to 15 minutes and then back back in the water, and you end on the cold.
So basically for about an hour a week, you can have these dramatic health benefits.
It's amazing.
It's dramatic.
Now, what about a cold shower?
Yeah, cold showers.
Because Wim Hof talks about like a two-minute cold shower in the morning.
Is that as good, or what's the deal with that?
Cold showers are definitely something that I would also say that if if people cannot come to a cold plunge then i think that you don't have a bathtub or a
cold yeah exactly not all people do then i think it's a very good alternative and people can start
off in a cold shower but there there are different benefits and it i i think that if people can only do cold showers, then that is better than nothing.
So I would say cold showers are very good for you. It will also activate your brown fat. It
will also activate your sympathetic nervous system. You will not have the complete activation
of your parasympathetic nervous system, and you will only get adapted to that temperature,
which you take your cold showers in of course so there are studies
on this showing actually that i was gonna say if you live in arizona and the cold water doesn't get
under like 60 degrees well then but if you live in massachusetts in the winter it's like 40 degrees
so yes yes exactly so it really depends on your your cold water How cold is it? So there is this interesting study where they compared temperatures of cold showers.
If you can get adapted, the question was, can you get adapted to cold water with cold showers?
And they divided these groups in how long time they ended on cold showers in their hot showers.
And there was also a group who just took hot showers.
And they found that if you end on a few seconds, 10 seconds cold shower with a certain degree,
it was 15 degrees and the other group was 12 degrees, and they then put them into cold plunges to see if those subjects who had taken
cold showers at 15 degrees Celsius, if they had adapted to cold water just in general.
So they tried that out in cold plunges at 10 degrees, but hyperventilate it just as much as the group who
didn't take a cold showers so the temperature is going to depend dictate whether you will get
adapted yeah i'm kind of addicted to cold and hot there but actually i think i might be addicted
it's so addictive it just makes you feel so good It's like better than any drug I've ever found. Not that I take a lot of drugs, but it's like,
it's pretty impressive. The other thing is these cryotherapy units, you know, where you go in and
you stand as like 270 degrees below zero, you put a little hat and mittens on and you sort of stand
there for three minutes. Does that do the same thing?
Yeah. So there's a lot of like questions. I have a lot of questions around that. And I have been through some of the literature. I can't say I've been through it all, but I've definitely
been through a lot of it. And I can say that it seems like it can activate your temperature
receptors in the skin. So you will have an activation in some degree to
your brown fat at least. And because the temperature is so low, you only spend what,
three minutes in there, isn't that right? Like three, four minutes.
Yeah, three minutes. Yeah, yeah, three minutes.
I think the protocols in the science literature is around the three, four minutes. If that is going to have the same effects as submerging into water, I would doubt because the modality is so different.
It's so different.
So that is also why if we cannot compare the cold showers with the cold dips, we can also not compare what we call jacuzzi or hot tubs.
Hot tub, yeah.
Yeah, hot tubs with sauna because it's air and water,
more molecules, of course, in the water closer to your skin.
So it's going to do different things.
So we need more studies also on the cryo to exactly say,
how is that going to lower your inflammation?
But I believe there is something there.
I just need some more backup
from the data. Yeah, got it. Well, we're going to link to this study, but in Cell Reports Medicine,
you published in 2021 a paper called Altered Brown Fat Thermoregulation Enhanced Cold Water
or Cold-Induced Thermogenesis in Young Healthy Winter Swimming Men. and there you talk about like the sweet spot of the dose right yeah um and and you talk about this sort of concept of of why um there's a minimum threshold
effect um for both cold and and heat exposure so can you talk about what those thresholds are
and a little bit more about that that study yeah so uh so we already just touched upon the the protocol for that what
actually was the results of that that was the minimum threshold it was like it was like 11
minutes and 57 minutes of hot and 11 minutes of cold okay yeah that's what i thought we were
getting to per week exactly per week per week yeah and divided on multiple days so i tend to
do that in a day if I can.
If I can go back and forth for like four times and then hot and cold and I can get that in a day.
Yeah. And I think that, I mean, it could be that we don't know what's the higher threshold because we don't have studies showing exactly on the cold water.
If that's going to have some detrimental effects on our system
down the road.
But we do have, yeah, I don't know if we should go there right now, but it's like we have
these sauna studies, observational studies, where we can see a higher and a lower threshold
for which a window for where it's definitely good for you.
And that is why I think because of that, it's just stress. Heat stress, cold stress, it's just stress for the body.
We should keep ourselves, try to hit the sweet spot in the middle where it's healthy for ourselves and for our system.
Because you could be feeling really good when you get out of your cold plunge.
And some people can build up a long time, which I don't really recommend that people do, even though you can mentally feel, okay, I'm getting cooler and cooler.
I mean, not only physically, but I'm getting really tough and cool because I can sit in this plunge for a very long time.
Oh, my God, yeah.
Yeah.
And maybe also some get a little bit competitive around it.
Yeah, yeah, yeah. competitive around it. I just want to underline that it might be that you cannot really see
what's happening right now. And you may feel really good afterwards, but it doesn't mean that
it's not overstressing yourself. And maybe down the road, it adds up and gets too much. We don't
know that, but we need to figure that out and do more studies on it. But I think it's very important.
Yeah, I agree. I think it's very important. Yeah, I agree.
I think it's going back and forth.
I went to a conference up in the mountains in Colorado, and they had a sauna that was amazing.
A wood-fired sauna.
It got super hot.
And then they had a cold plunge outside, which was really cold.
And so we had a group of us, all these overachievers and you know and so we're going
back and forth and like increasing the time and time and i i got to five minutes in the cold
which was pretty damn cold this one woman got to like i think 10 minutes it was just
impressive it was very impressive she's like a navy seal you know like oh okay yeah she wasn't
a navy seal but i was like being a Navy SEAL.
So that's really amazing.
Now I want to go into the heat part.
So we did the cold.
We did a good job on the cold.
At a high level, is it better, you think,
to do hot and cold alternating therapies?
Or, like, is it good enough just to cold or just too hot?
Or what are the advantages to doing both?
I would say anything is good.
So if you can only do the cold, then do that.
If you can do the heat, then do that.
Just do some of it.
If you cannot do both.
But if you can do both, I would say it's a really good thing to try and contrast it. I don't think that you will, I can't say what exactly effects you will miss out on because my study shows the combination.
Yeah, exactly.
But we know what happens in the cold and we know that it creates this hormetic stress and you increase these stress proteins and it repairs the cells,
which also happens in the heat.
The mitochondria in the cold will increase.
And in the heat, the heat will make the mitochondria more efficient.
So there are overlapping effects of doing the cold stress and the heat stress for your
cells.
And when I talk about cells, you should just think about your whole body
because the whole body is like building blocks of all your cells
putting together.
So it's just not one cell I'm talking about.
It's a whole organism.
So it's good to do both based on what your studies.
Can you take us through the mechanisms of action of how heat stress
benefits the body? What are the mechanisms of action of how heat stress benefits the body.
What are the mechanisms and how does it work?
Because, you know, in my book, you know, Young Forever, I talk about mimesis.
And I talk about how, you know, in these Finnish studies, you saw like a 40 plus reduction percent in mortality in the group that did four to five saunas a week.
And the control group was like one sauna a week because pretty much everybody in Finland has a sauna. So they all do saunas. So the control group was also doing saunas a week and the control group was like one sauna a week because pretty much everybody in
finland has a sauna so they all do saunas so the control group was also doing sauna but it was
still a pretty dramatic reduction so tell us about how does this work what's the mechanism of action
what what are they doing to the body yeah and i i just want to say i think these results are
remarkable from finland and the the study that you mentioned from 2015 is really showing what happens down
the road.
So this is like results after following these sauna bathers for 25 years.
And the control group was actually also using the sauna.
So one of the things that we research sometimes debate a lot is that the control group is
some completely other group who doesn't do anything healthy like the sauna bathers or the winter swimmers. But this group
has actually chosen to also do this kind of healthy thing. So even though they maybe not
have the time to do four to seven times a week or they for some other reason don't do that, but they still just do one time.
And that's at least a choice in your life that you want to expose yourself
to extreme temperatures.
So I think it's a good study.
I really love it.
So tell us about the mechanism of action.
How does the heat stress work to activate longevity switches in the body
and healing responses?
So, yeah. stress work to activate longevity switches in the body and healing responses.
So, yeah.
Yeah, I'm not sure I can explain all of the things that's going on, because I also know from the literature that there are still things that we don't know.
But what we do know is that when we activate our heat receptors in our skin,
like the cold receptors,
they will be sent a signal to the hypothalamus and we will have an increase in no adrenaline
and we will also have an increase
of all our stress response, of course.
Nitric oxide will also be released
and there will be an increase of,
or the blood vessels would dilate because you need to get rid of your heat in your body the brown fat will also be activated it seems that there are actually
studies showing that the brown fat which is increasing our metabolism is also activated in
the heat and it's kind of like contraintuitive i know that yeah it's kind of like contraintuitive. I know that. It's kind of like,
I have tried this in India or in Sri Lanka, actually. So when you get really, really hot
and you're too hot, then you are given a tea to drink some tea. And that's like, why are you
giving me something really hot when I am too hot already? But that is to drink that, get warmer in your core. And when
you do that, you will help your blood vessel to open and that makes your body's ability to sweat
even better. So that is what the brown fat also does to your body. It activates. So you can open
your blood vessel, you can get rid of the heat. But the heat stress response is, or the best response from that,
is actually an increase in sweating and your ability to sweat,
but also a lower core temperature.
So for every time you go and expose your heat,
you activate your heat stress response in your body,
you will prepare your body for the next time. And by that, the body is
sensing, okay, I will have to prepare myself. So your core temperature actually by time lowers a
bit. And you can use that for something. And I don't know if you want to know that.
Yeah, of course. Now what? Use it for what?
Yeah. So I love that people are people like what could we use a low core
temperature for and i'm also like well actually when you lower your core temperature you have a
higher window for for example when you go and train in the training center when you do your sport
because what happens is what is lowering your running economy is actually that your temperature goes up so if you want to have
a higher training economy or you can train for a longer time before you get exhausted before you
hyperventilate and you have to stop that is your temperature going up so if you can widen that
window a bit then you you are actually getting fitter. Oh, wow. So it makes you fitter. Actually, I think the science is there that actually increases your cardiovascular fitness.
It is cardiovascular fitness. And this is also shown in studies that because of the dilation and the contraction of the cells,
of the blood vessels, but also because of the sweating that increases your ability to sweat that is gonna for your blood
vessels your blood your whole circulation is like um a training it's like um training out or
it's like a moderate hit training i would say yeah yeah interesting so it's like exercising
by sitting in a sauna exactly yeah essentially is interesting, it has really great cardiovascular benefits. Like tell us about the cardiovascular benefits of sauna.
Yeah.
So going back to the studies that we just talked about before, the observational studies from Finland, which shows that if you go into the sauna two to three times per week, it will lower your risk of cardiovascular disease by 27%. And if you go into the sauna four to seven times per week,
which is almost like one time every day,
then you can lower your risk of cardiovascular diseases by 50%.
So I think that there's a lot of health benefits,
which we can see here in this study on a long term, which is then, and now we'll go back to that, because of lower inflammation.
Because the heat stress is going to activate your system, your blood vessels will dilate, and you will have an increased ability to also contract and dilate your blood vessels.
Well, I mean, I think, you know,
just to kind of talk about the cardiovascular fitness
benefits in terms of blood pressure, heart rate,
heart rate variability, autonomic nervous system health,
stress resilience, reduction in, you know,
congestive heart failure sort of complications.
I mean, it's really quite interesting
to see the data on this, right?
Yeah, exactly.
So the cardiovascular health increases because you also, it's like a cardiovascular fitness
you do when you go into the heat.
So your blood pressure will actually be lowered.
There are studies showing that the blood pressure goes down when you exercise your system in
the heat and also your heart rate and your heart rate variability. So there are really signs now today backing up that the heat stress is a workout for your body.
Yeah.
So just to unpack it a little bit for people.
So heart rate variability is a metric that is measuring the complexity of your heart rate.
The more complex it is, the healthier you are.
And it's a great sign of your stress response,
your autonomic nervous system. And it's sort of a great measurement that we can use. And we can do
it through our Oura Ring, Apple Watch, all kinds of Garmin, Fitbit. We all measure this heart rate
variability, which is really an important thing to track because it's really the sign of your
overall health. And it correlates with mortality and many other things. And so what we see with
sauna is it actually increases the complexity
and increases the heart rate variability,
which is really an important effect
of the saunas and the heat therapy.
There's another thing that happens.
It has to do with heat shock proteins.
Are you familiar with the heat shock proteins?
Can you talk about what are heat shock proteins,
why they matter and what they do
and why it's so important for us to activate these heat shock proteins in our body?
So heat shock proteins increase when you go into the heat and the body senses that now you're getting warm.
So the heat shock proteins are in all your cells and you can increase that when we get warm or the cells get warm.
And that is to protect the cells.
So the heat shock proteins increase and they repair the cells from the inside,
meaning that if you don't overdo it,
the heat shock proteins is going to repair the cells so they will live longer.
So that's good for longevity.
So if your cells live longer, you will also live longer, right?
So the heat shock proteins, there are many of those.
There is especially one family of those.
It's called heat shock protein 70, which is the most studied.
I have found to show that when you activate that with heat, then this group of heat shock proteins is going to repair the cells.
There is also the FOXO3, which I don't know how to pronounce that right, but FOXO3.
FOXO3.
It's a mitochondrial regulator, right?
It relates to longevity.
Yes, exactly.
And that is also increasing in the heat.
So, and that's going to help your cells also be repaired and it's going to live longer.
And as long as you don't overdo it, that's back to the hermetic stress,
the healthy stress,
that if you overdo it,
then that will just exhaust itself.
Yeah, maybe you'll get heat shock and you die
or you go too cold,
you get hypothermia and you die, right?
So it's that Goldilocks amount, right?
What you're talking about.
Yeah, I think the stress will have,
the overstressing will start before you die.
That's right.
So this is amazing.
So the heat shock protein is important.
Also, they help with protein repair, don't they?
A lot of proteins are damaged.
And then one of the hallmarks of aging that we talk about,
and I explain in my book, the hallmarks of aging is damage to proteins.
And those damaged proteins don't work properly.
And proteins are like the messenger systems in our body.
They do so much and build tissue or repair organs.
But they're also communication systems.
And so a lot of the communications get screwed up and we have an information problem, almost like, you know, bad software running our biology.
And so these sauna therapies seem to improve these proteins and fix them and repair them.
Is that accurate?
Yeah, exactly.
The heat shock proteins repair the proteins in the cells, which is like a little magic doctor in our cells that you can just call with just going into the heat.
And I think it's very simple and you don't have to be really good at it or anything.
You don't have to be anyone special. You just go into the heat and then you could just repair yourself just for a bit, just a little bit of dose of repairing myself.
And then you can go home. You don't have to overdo it even. Yeah. And it's anti-inflammatory
also, as you mentioned, and the FOXO is involved in regulating inflammation in the body.
So it helps with that, but also it seems to activate the innate immune system, right? Our
immune system gets boosted when we do this hot therapy.
Yeah, it seems also to be activated.
So what amount of saunas do we need?
You mentioned 57 minutes a week.
I mean, is that a reasonable amount?
You know, like that's like four 15-minute sessions a week?
Yeah, so I think if we, I'll try to compare this actually with the Finnish sauna studies, just to see if it's comparable in what we can maybe call a good window for stress.
So if we do the 57 minutes over a week, divided on two to three days, and with two sessions each day, that means you could do four sessions each week that means you could do four sessions each week or you
could do six sessions each week so it's between 10 and 15 minutes each session then okay hope you
follow yeah yeah yeah yeah i try to get so hot that i can't stand it and then i go on and get
so cold that i can't stand it and then i just get out so it's like i go back and forth but you're saying you don't even need to do it that extreme just a little bit even
yeah it makes a big difference exactly I can come with a good example after this I can I can tell
you how little you can do actually so that's not so scary then for people it's like you don't have
to be the ice man and be like Wim Hof in the ice bucket for like two hours. No, you can be completely normal,
scared of the cold and hate the heat
and just say to yourself,
well, I'm not really loving running 10 kilometers either.
That's not really something I personally love to do,
but I do it and I go up and train.
I like that now, but in the beginning, I didn't.
You didn't like it, yeah.
No, and everybody who takes
a break from exercise don't love the first run for five kilometers and they will hurt in your muscles
and that is just exactly when you do the hormetic stress by going into the cold into the heat
but back to the the 57 minutes so you can divide out. And if we compare it with the finna sona studies, it seems that there is a higher and a lower threshold as well.
But we see that if you do more than 19 minutes up to 30 minutes, so 19 to 30 minutes, it seems also to have, right, I'll start another place. So I'll say from zero minutes and up to 19 minutes,
you will have an increase in, or you have a risk, a lower risk, sorry,
a lower risk of cardiovascular diseases.
And that window will continue up to 30 minutes,
but it won't like be better or anything.
Your risk will get better. But after 30 minutes, there it won't be better or anything. Your risk will get better.
But after 30 minutes, there seems to be a plateau where, yeah, exactly, where the benefits
are not shown anymore.
And maybe even the risk of cardiovascular diseases increases.
So it seems that under 30 minutes is like the healthy.
And if you can stop at 19 minutes, that is where you get the most out of it.
So my protocol shows 10 to 15 minutes even gives you benefits.
So that is like in between.
So that's why I call it a bit.
Maybe it's the sweet spot.
I don't know.
I love that.
I love that.
Well, I also, I'm sorry, the important thing is to stay hydrated.
So make sure they drink plenty of water.
And also I recommend electrolytes because you lose a lot of electrolytes and people will often be able to tolerate more heat if they stay hydrated and have electrolytes.
So that's a little little tip. So in terms of tech technology, I mean, there's infrared saunas.
There's, you know, regular heat saunas there's hot baths there's sauna blankets
are they all the same what you're better it doesn't make a difference do you have any data
do we not know there's yeah i mean there are not too many i don't want to offend anyone, but it's like there are not very good studies on this yet.
But there are some studies and it shows that you can use the infrared sauna.
The most studies are on skin, on eczema.
And if it has a difference in eczema patients in children and also in adults
and it seems actually to increase the moist of the skin and if you don't overdo it you won't get
burned that was also one of the results for infrared for infrared yeah you can burn yourself
actually from that but there are i think it's a difficult thing to go into infrared sonar research because
there are different lengths of the sonar. Exactly. And there are the short, the mid, and the long
lengths of wavelengths. So it's very difficult to compare also these studies so some saunas have
only the long wavelengths and some have the near combined with i mean it's it's a little bit
difficult to go into that um and i we need more we need more data but they need more but they work
and they work and they work and And what about like a hot bath?
Because many people don't own a sauna.
Yeah.
What about a hot bath?
Does that work?
Yeah.
Hot baths are very good, actually, it seems.
So there are more studies on this.
And I can just give an example.
So it should be as hot as you can handle it?
No, no, no, no.
It shouldn't be.
So there are studies where they
have tested type 2 diabetic patients and looked at glucose levels where they have been in a hot
bath. They used a hot bath for three weeks and they saw that the type 2 diabetic patients who was in the study, they actually lowered their Hb1c level.
Yeah.
Your average blood sugar, yeah.
It shows the amount of how much sugar over a period of time they have in the blood. And there are also studies showing that the temperature was 39 to 40 degrees Celsius.
What is that in Fahrenheit?
Like 100.
Like 100, okay.
90 is to 100, yeah.
Okay, so you can use that, right?
But baths can be effective, but they're different than saunas,
and we don't know if they activate all the same pathways, or do they?
Not the same, but it's also the diving response because you also go into the hot water, right?
But it seems that it also activates the brown fat, but that is not tested. Like my study,
exactly what they have measured, what happens if they're hot bath, but you activate your metabolism
as well. And you must do that because they also lower their blood pressure,
heart rate, and also the blood sugar.
But the other study about the pain showed that you can have a pain relief
if you go into a hot bath at 20 degrees Celsius,
which is like on the middle side, not too cold, but not too hot.
But it's like, yeah.
And also another study showed
like 25 to 27 degrees also had pain relief effects. So you can have many, many different
temperatures doing all this. I just think that it also shows that you should vary the temperature
and even the temperature just being different from your skin
is going to actually make a difference.
So basically, you don't have to live by the North Sea in the winter
to do this, right?
You can use a cold shower and a hot bath.
And most people have access to that.
You can do cold showers.
You can alternate back and forth.
You can do them independently, right?
This is all stuff that most people have access to.
But you think it's worth the investment to buy some type of sauna,
a sauna blanket, a small sauna for your house, or a cold plunge?
Yeah, I think so.
If you're a person.
If we look at all the things we spend our money on for our health,
it's a gift that keeps on giving.
I put a steam shower in my bathroom.
Really?
Like 23 years ago. i it's still working i've had to replace the glass a little bit around the shower but basically it's
it's the gift that keeps on giving and i just have a big bathtub and i fill with cold water
i don't know yet but it's it's something i've been doing for so long and i find it one of the most powerful health enhancing technologies out there and it's it's basically very inexpensive or or
can be close to free it can be it can be almost free but actually i think people should start
thinking about this like for example exercising and going to the gym or buying your exercise equipment. You have to exercise your nervous system also.
And you have to buy some equipment for this because this is training your physiology,
but also your mental health.
So this is doing a lot more, I think.
Of course, the exercise is actually doing some of the same things.
But here you can do it really rapidly and you can mix this,
but you have to invest in it and you have to, people just have to get used to the thought of
like exercising your nervous system, I think. Well, this is so exciting because, you know,
there's all these people talking about biohacking this and biohacking that, but you're a PhD
research scientist and you spent your career focusing on the biology of hot and cold stress
and how that can activate our body's own innate healing systems and even activate our longevity pathways, which I think is just phenomenal.
And what's great about your work is that not only are you publishing papers in academic journals, but you create an online school for people called the Soberg Institute, which is not how you pronounce it in Danish.
But for us who don't speak Danish,
the Soberg is how I pronounce it, S-O-E-B-E-R-G Institute. And it basically teaches you how to use heat and cold therapy and breathing in a way to optimize your health. And you've written a book
called Winter Swimming, The Nordic Way Toward a Healthier and Happier Life. It's super exciting.
So give us just briefly like a couple of minute rundown
on the Institute, what we're going to learn
and why people should sign up right now.
Yeah, yeah, well, I made the school
because I get so many questions about how to do this.
And I would really love to teach everyone about this.
And like I did my subjects in my studies.
So I've made this course.
It's a three week course of 21 days.
It's just something that you can do in your own pace,
but it's about the cold, how to use the cold in different ways,
but also the heat and how functional breathing is also going to lower your stress level.
So the main thing about the course is how to lower stress and inflammation
to a more healthier and happier life.
So I give you like a rundown through all these videos. It's all video content, which you can take in your own pace. And it's very bite sized. So every video is very short, but there are many of them in a library. So it's really easy to go through. And I'm very happy that I
just got the first reviews of my courses and they are actually brilliant. I'm really happy. I spent
so much time on this course. So I'm happy. It's well received so far. So yeah.
What's so great is that, you know, a lot of academic researchers don't translate their
work into practical applications for people. And I'm so happy you created the Institute.
I'm so happy people can go online and find it.
We're going to put the link in the show notes,
but you can just Google the Soberg Institute, S-O-E-B-E-R-G.
You can also get her book, Winter Swimming.
And also, if you go get the course now,
you get a 10% discount on the three-week online thermalist course
with the code HYMAN, H-Y-M-A-N.
So I would encourage you to
check that out. We'll put all this in the show notes. And I encourage you all to make sure you
incorporate heat and cold therapy into your life on a regular weekly basis. It's a game changer in
so many ways. It'll make you happier, healthier, fitter, skinnier, and live a long time. So I think
it's kind of a win-win. Yeah, amen.
Well, Susanna, thank you so much for your work.
Keep going at it.
We want to learn more research from you over time.
Everybody listening to this podcast,
I hope you liked it.
It certainly was exciting for me to learn so much about the science behind the things that I've known feel good
and now we know why.
So thank you so much, Susanna.
And for those listening,
if you actually had experience with the hot and cold therapies,
what have they done for you?
How have they changed your life?
We'd love to hear, leave a comment.
Share this with your friends and family.
Everybody needs to hear about it.
And subscribe wherever you get your podcasts.
And we'll see you next week on The Doctor's Pharmacy.
Thank you for having me.
Hey, everybody, it's Dr. Hyman.
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