ZOE Science & Nutrition - Cold exposure, saunas and your health: what the science says | Dr. Susanna Søberg & Prof. Tim Spector
Episode Date: May 15, 2025Unwrap the truth about your food 👉 Get ZOE’s new app Most of us avoid the cold. We crank up the heating, bundle up in layers, and curse every icy gust of wind. But what if freezing — or ev...en sweating — could be the key to better health? In this episode, Jonathan is joined by two world-leading scientists to explore a radical idea: that extreme temperatures might unlock powerful benefits for your metabolism, mental health, and even longevity. Dr. Susanna Søberg, the researcher who coined the “Søberg Principle,” has spent years studying the effects of cold plunges and saunas on the human body. Her findings? Just minutes of exposure a few times a week could improve insulin sensitivity, activate brown fat, and lower stress. She’s joined by Prof. Tim Spector - professor of genetic epidemiology at King’s College London, one of the world’s top 100 most cited scientists, and scientific co-founder at ZOE - who explains how these temperature shocks may even impact your gut microbiome. This episode will change how you think about discomfort, explain the science behind extreme temperatures and might just inspire your healthiest new habit. 🥑 Make smarter food choices. Become a member at zoe.com - 10% off with code PODCAST 🌱 Try our new plant based wholefood supplement - Daily 30+ Follow ZOE on Instagram. 00:00 Can saunas improve metabolism? 02:03 Can heat really mimic a cardio workout? 05:13 Why do I feel sleepy after a sauna? 07:33 The surprising link between heat and your heart 10:37 What cold water instantly triggers in your body 13:19 This 'good fat' burns your bad fat — here’s how 16:11 How just walking in the cold can raise your metabolism 18:57 Why a colder bedroom could transform your blood sugar 22:07 Winter swimmers vs non-swimmers — the science is clear 25:39 How short dips beat long soaks in cold water 29:12 Cold plunges activate your cell repair systems 31:37 The 30-second switch: from panic to peace 33:58 Can cold water really boost mental health? 36:07 Could gut bacteria respond to temperature? 38:53 Cold plunges and antidepressants: early findings 41:01 Cold shock vs hyperventilation — what to avoid 43:27 Is combining hot and cold better than just one? 45:36 Cryotherapy vs cold plunge — which works better? 47:19 Do cold showers actually do anything? 50:59 Why daily plunging might be too much stress 53:31 Should women cold plunge differently than men? 📚Books by our ZOE Scientists The Food For Life Cookbook Every Body Should Know This by Dr Federica Amati Food For Life by Prof. Tim Spector Mentioned in today's episode: Altered brown fat thermoregulation and enhanced cold-induced thermogenesis in young, healthy, winter-swimming men, Cell (2021) Cold exposure, gut microbiota and health implications: A narrative review, Sci Total Environ (2024) The gut microbiota facilitate their host tolerance to extreme temperature, BCM Microbiology (2024) Have feedback or a topic you'd like us to cover? Let us know here. Episode transcripts are available here.
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Welcome to ZOE Science and Nutrition, where world-leading scientists explain how their research can improve your health.
Cold plunges before sunrise. Saunas before bed.
Extreme temperatures are the hottest wellness ritual.
But is this just another fad? Or could these practices actually improve your health and extend your life? Science says it's more than just hype.
New research shows that your body responds powerfully to extremes of heat
and cold. From shifting insulin sensitivity to boosting feel-good
hormones. These stresses may boost metabolism, lift mood and even slow down aging, if they're
used the right way.
In today's episode, we're joined by Dr. Susanne Soberg, whose research on Norwegian
swimmers cemented her as a leading expert in the field of thermal stress.
She's joined by Professor Tim Spector, one of the world's top 100 most cited scientists,
Professor of Epidemiology at King's College London,
and my scientific co-founder at ZOE.
By the end of this episode, you'll be ready to take the plunge
and use thermal stress to feel better, today and into the future.
Susanna, thank you so much for joining us today.
Thank you so much for inviting me.
It's a pleasure. And Tim, thanks for being here.
Very excited with this one.
Susanne, we'd like to kick off our show here at Zoë
with a rapid fire Q&A with questions from our listeners.
Are you willing to give it a go?
Of course.
We have some very strict rules.
You can say yes or no, or if you have to,
you can have a sentence.
Okay.
Ready to go?
Ready.
Can a hot sauna mimic the effects of mild exercise?
Yes.
Can shivering boost my metabolism?
Yes.
Tim, could extreme temperatures change my gut microbiome?
Possibly.
Tim, is my metabolism mainly about my weight?
No.
Susanna, are there rules that we should follow before braving extreme hot or cold?
Yes.
That was great. Now you get like a whole sentence.
What's the biggest misconception about extreme temperature exposure?
The biggest misconception around extreme temperatures is that women shouldn't cold plunge.
I'm really excited by this episode.
It is one of the ones we've had like the most questions from members about over the last six months, I would say.
And I think that's because saunas and cold plunges are popping up everywhere right now.
On the other hand, I'm going to be honest, Susanna, my experience of stepping into freezing
water is it is absolutely awful. I hate it. I can't imagine why anyone would want
to do it. I want to understand basically why everyone's got so excited about this
and whether it's just like the latest fad or there's actually any reason to
believe that
making oneself miserable can possibly be good for oneself. Why don't we start with a sauna?
What's happening in a sauna and why is it that it sort of makes me feel sleepy and makes me want to
slow down when I go in one? The thing about sauna is that you actually both activate your sympathetic
nervous system, so that is your fight
and flight system in your body, but you also activate your rest and digest part of your system.
And that is what is called the parasympathetic nervous system. So when you go into the sonar
and you sit there for a while, you will heat up from the inside and out and you will start to sweat and if you can sit there long enough for your heart
Rate to go up you will have a sweating that will correspond to having a mild workout
So the cardiovascular you can say activity
corresponds to doing this mild kind of workout and that is stressing your system just a bit. And when you do that, you actually also increased cortisol levels, which people also misunderstanding
that that is so dangerous, but it is not if you just do it acutely and then you will have
that decrease in your stress response afterwards.
And that is why maybe you get a little bit sleepy because you actually get a high increase
in your temperature in the body.
And that is what you do when you actually want to go to sleep.
So if you get a little bit sleepy afterwards, it's kind of natural.
So taking a sauna maybe at a certain time of the day might be a good thing.
So you can use it as a tool.
You're saying just sitting in the sauna actually makes my body sort of go through a workout,
because it's making my heart rate go up. Could you explain that for a minute?
Yeah, and even without moving a muscle. And that's kind of amazing. There are these cohort studies
performed in Finland. So researchers there have followed more than 2000 sonar bathers and saw that after 15 to
20 years, they could see that they actually had a better cardiovascular outcomes based
on how many times they have done sonars per week.
So the more they did, the better cardiovascular outcomes they actually had and lower risk of developing cardiovascular diseases and
even had a lower mortality risk when they measured this over 20 years. So
when they then looked at comparison between how many times a week you go to the sauna and then
also if you did exercise on top of that they did see this additional or additive effect when you
combine the two. So you can see sauna as a cardiovascular workout that is not attributed
to your muscles, but you still get that workout for your heart. And that is really good for
your cardiovascular system.
Why does my heart have to do any work in the sauna? I can see I need to sweat a lot so I don't die.
That I can understand.
But what's going on?
Why does it make my heart rate go up?
When you get warm on your skin,
the temperature sensors are going to send a signal to your temperature regulating sensor in the brain.
And there the sensors say,
well, are you getting warmer or colder than you were before?
And depending on that, they will send out signals in the body saying, well, now you getting warmer or colder than you were before? And depending on that, they will send
out signals in the body saying, whoa, now you're getting too warm and send out no adrenaline.
And these are our stress hormones. So no adrenaline is released in your body,
which will make your heart rate go up. It will also activate your brown fat actually to make you
heat up so you can sweat better. Because the only thing the body wants to do now is survive.
Survive this heat because the body doesn't know when you will ever get out again.
Because you are in control, you know yourself that you can sit there for a while,
but the body doesn't know that. So it wants to get rid of all that heat.
And to do that, we need to increase the heart rate.
You also dilate your blood vessels.
So the blood needs to get pumped around in a longer way.
So the body has to get more blood flowing around.
And for that, you would need to increase your heart rate.
And Tim, as you're listening to this, are there any reasons to be concerned about that
activity or is this all like great and healthy and natural?
It is putting a strain on the cardiovascular system. So if you are unwell, it's probably not a great idea to do it in a proper hot sauna. So I think we have to take that in mind. And there
are probably individual differences. Some people do faint more easily when their circulatory system is changing.
You know, it might be on blood pressure medications, which mean when it goes up or down, it can
drop more than others.
So yeah, I think certainly the first few times people are doing it, it's very, you know,
do it for short times, be rather careful, underdo it rather than overdo it.
But as long as you're sensible when you're starting,
you sort of build it up gradually,
the risks are pretty minimal.
And most people are gonna get benefit rather than any risk.
I'd like to share something exciting.
Back in March, 2022, we started this podcast
to uncover how the latest research
can help us live longer and healthier lives.
We've spoken to leading scientists around the world
doing amazing research.
And across hundreds of hours of conversations,
they've revealed key insights
that can help you to improve your health.
If you don't have hundreds of hours to spare,
no need to worry.
At the request of many of you,
our team has created a guide that contains 10 of the most impactful discoveries from the podcast I think the first time I ever went to inner sauna
was when I went to Finland.
My grandmother thought this was completely mad, Susanna.
It was like, why would you choose
to like get put in the oven as she put?
So I think it's fascinating that you're explaining
that there's these things that we understand,
this stress, these changes,
and you're saying they can be beneficial.
Before we unpack, I guess,
why those stresses could be beneficial,
could you talk about the opposite of this?
So one is going into the sauna, but I know you're a big believer also in the cold plunge.
What happens when, like, I'm thinking about my own personal experience of, like,
going into the sea in England, which I've done once because it was way too cold.
It's very unpleasant. What's going on in your body as you do that?
Yeah, a lot of things are going on in your body when you go into the cold water.
It's very different from a cold shower also, but we can get back to that.
So, emerging yourself into cold water will mean that you will put this very, very big
stressor on your body because the body is in a natural temperature, you don't want to get too cold. But this is so potent because it surrounds your body immediately with no air, of course.
So the potent of activating your cold receptors in the skin is like 100%.
And that is like a huge stressor sending a rapid signal to your brain
that now you are definitely in
a situation where you are in danger actually.
So the body acts as if you are in danger even though you do it deliberately and sends a
signal to the brain to regulate your body so that you can better survive this.
So it sends out new adrenaline to activate your brown fat. And Susanne, can you explain exactly what is brown fat?
We have two kind of fat tissues also in the body.
And one of them is the white fat, which we know it's on our belly,
it's on our thighs, and we want to get rid of that because it can grow.
And it's so difficult to activate it and get rid of those fat pearls, you can say,
because it's all fat pearls just stuck together. So that stores our energy in the body.
Quite opposite to that, we have the brown fat. The brown fat actually increases our metabolism.
So the brown fat can burn the white fat. So it's kind of like a good fat and we could say that the white fat is a bad
fat but we also need some of that white fat but the brown fat we want to increase so that we can
have a higher metabolism or energy expenditure both when we are purposely activating it but also
when we are just sitting here or when we are asleep, the more we have of the brown
fat, the better.
It's just like you can compare it to the muscles.
So we all agree and know today that it's good to have a lot of muscle mass because there's
a lot of mitochondria in the muscle fibers.
And the more we have of those, the better it's functioning and it increases our insulin
sensitivity. And it's the and it increases our insulin sensitivity.
And it's the same with the brown fat cells.
The more we have of brown fat cells, the more mitochondria we have, the better insulin sensitivity
we have and also it can burn more fat in our body.
Not only when we are activating it on purpose, but also when we are just like sitting here.
So our basic metabolic rate will actually go up
if we have more brown fat.
So just like the muscles, it can grow if we use it,
you can say, and if we don't use it, we will lose it.
So it's something that we can grow and it can also shrink.
Firstly, where is my brown fat?
Cause I didn't realize I had any,
so I'm now really curious.
And secondly, you mentioned the brown fat
because it's linked to this discussion around
like the sauna and the cold plunge.
Could you just help me again to understand that link
and our listeners too?
The brown fat is located six different places in the body.
And the biggest, you can say, depot
is located under your clavicular bones.
So down your neck and out to your shoulders, all the time feeling what temperature are
you in, making sure that you have blood to your brain and warm blood to your brain and
warm blood to your heart and your liver and your kidneys, so your vital organs. So it's
centered around your central nervous
system, which is kind of smart from nature, right? Because then when you get a little
bit cold from walking outside in the wind, and there was actually studies on this showing
that if you walk outside, just a t-shirt, you will activate your brown fat. So it's
so sensitive, making sure that we are in the perfect temperature
balance in our body so we don't get too cold or too warm. And by doing so, actually it uses fuel
from the body, which is sugar, so glucose, and fat, which is the white fat, to increase this heat
in the body. So it's like an engine where it takes the fuel of sugar and fat from the bloodstream.
And that is where we see that if we activate the brown fat, it can actually
increase our insulin sensitivity and it can also clear the blood sugar from our
bloodstream. And this is shown both in mice studies, but it's also shown in
the in human studies as well.
So the code is like shut out in a way.
To your best, you can say you are only human, you are not made of metal.
So that means that very quickly you will cool your inner tissue.
So that is why I'm very, very much a big speaker for only short-term cold exposure,
because the long-term cold exposure has no benefits. There is no research showing that sitting in a cold
bath for a very long time has any benefits, but the brown fat is keeping
you warm and if you cannot keep yourself warm enough with just brown fat
activation, you will also start to use your muscles to shiver. And the brown fat and the muscles are the only two,
you can say, thermogenic tissues in our body,
and they will signal to each other.
So kind of like talk to each other actually,
and make sure that it's activated.
So the muscles are sending signals to the brown fat
and the other way around to make sure
that both thermogenic tissue is keeping you warm.
And Susanne, when you say thermogenic tissue, what does that mean?
Thermogenic tissue is, you can think about it as tissue in your body, which will make sure that you
are in the right temperature for your cells in your body to have the right activation and function.
It's funny, I'm thinking of my grandmother, my nanny again, who always like, well, it's cold,
you have to wear a scarf. And now I'm thinking like, my scarf, is that literally going around
my brown fat because that's somehow I'm more sensitive? Or is this like entirely by chance?
No, it could be by chance. But if you are a cold sissy, which I'm not afraid to say that I used to
be a cold sissy, but maybe you are cold sissy because you never'm not afraid to say that I used to be a cold sissy. But maybe you are a cold
sissy because you never exposed yourself to the cold. So you get colder by staying, you can say,
too warm, too comfortable. When you are comfortable, then you get colder. So it's difficult for you to
temperature regulate yourself. And the purpose of the brown fat is to make you survive.
And if you use your brown fat, then you will get better at temperature regulating your body.
And for that, it needs fuel. That is why the brown fat is so closely connected to your metabolism.
So if you go out and expose yourself to the cold, like I did years ago, now it's 10 years ago, and I started doing
that, it was horrible. Really, I used to sit with blankets and layers and layers. And today
I don't have to do that. I don't have cold hands and feet anymore. And I don't pack up
in layers anymore like I used to do. And I can actually do cold water swimming today,
which was so difficult in
the beginning, because I actually don't think that my brown fat was really like activated
or I didn't use it that much because I kept packing myself in in warm clothing. And yeah,
maybe I was just very comfortable. Maybe I just resembled a lot of the modern people
today like we are so scared of getting cold.
So my personal journey definitely helped me understand this tissue much better.
And how temperature regulating ourselves is actually something that we can contribute to.
And how our metabolism work is definitely something that has everything to do with our choices in our everyday life.
Can you explain to me, Suzanna, a lot of the science was done on mice and rats
that have a lot of brown fat, and it's easy to study them,
and clearly it works for these rodents, and it's a really crucial part
of their survival mechanisms. But for humans, I think, I don't know what the latest data was,
but it was something like only half a percent or something of our fat is brown fat.
Compared to our white fat, it's a tiny amount that we're expecting the same results from
mice and rats in humans.
Is it really that important in humans or do you think we've overestimated it from these
animal studies?
Or is that still the best explanation that we have of how humans
control their temperature? Or do you think there could be other mechanisms we don't know about?
I think there's definitely a lot we don't know yet. Brown fat has been one of these research
areas for hundreds of years that we have known about. but it was not until actually the millennium
that we discovered that a little bit of cold exposure could actually change our
metabolism, so our glucose balance and our insulin sensitivity in humans. This
is actually not about the size of the tissue, there is actually research in
humans and this is so fascinating. It's a study from 2014
showing what the researchers had, people who had a bad insulin sensitivity, and some of them were
obese and some of them had type 2 diabetes. And they had them sleep in a room which was 24 degrees
Celsius for a month, and then they measured their brown fat. Then they slept at
19 degrees for a month and then again measured their brown fat and also insulin sensitivity.
What they found was that sleeping in a room at night at 19 degrees Celsius actually increased
their insulin sensitivity and the glucose clearance
got better and when you then look at the measure of the brown fat you can see
that it had had increased and that was just from sleeping at 19 degrees in a
cold room for a month. So it's a very potent tissue which when activated you
can actually increase it and when you're not using it,
it shows also that it decreases. What they did after that month was having them sleep
at 24 degrees again, measured the brown fat and then at 27 degrees Celsius and measured
that again. And then they could see. So it actually is shrinked when the temperature
got warmer. So comfortable temperatures make the body tell this tissue that it's really not
needed right now. So it's like the muscles, then they shrink. So if you use the muscles
and you go to the gym and you lift your weights, then you are telling your muscles, we need
you. And the same thing you can do with your brown fat. Tell your brown fat that it's needed to help me keep a balance in my metabolism
and keep my insulin sensitivity high.
Because that is exactly, you can say the pandemic that we have right now, that people's insulin
sensitivity is just out of tune completely.
Susanne, I would love to maybe take this point to talk about your own research.
I think you've painted this wonderful picture about this brown fat that I had no idea I
had.
You've emphasized a lot, I think, the stress of both the cold plunge and the sauna.
Why can stress be good for me?
And maybe we could look at that through your own research, because I know this, you know,
when we were trying to figure out who to talk about this topic, very few people have really been studying this properly scientifically and you're one of
them. Could you tell us about Scandinavian winter swimming? Yes, I would love to. Scandinavian
winter swimming is definitely special. I feel it is. It's something that we have had for
hundreds of years here, but we've been doing it because it feels nice.
It's a good community thing to do. But recently, we are also starting to look more into the,
you can say the health benefits of it. Can we actually prove that it has any benefits,
which all the winter swimmers in the Nordic countries are saying? So one thing is like,
there's something that we can feel.
You feel better, you get more clarity in your brain,
you don't feel the brain fog anymore,
you have more drive and those things you can feel,
but there are also things which you cannot really feel
until at once.
And those were the things that I was interested in.
So the metabolism, can this extreme cold exposure or heat actually
create what is called hormetic stress? So this is what we call the good stress. Acute
stress can be a good thing for you because it activates your mitochondria and it tells
your body that you need to waken up and you need to do something to protect yourself.
And that is a good thing because you activate your metabolism,
which is the brown fat muscles, all your mitochondria, heat shock
proteins in the cells, everything is activated. In my research, I
wanted to figure out something else that besides exercise, which I
think we have established now, that is healthy for us. Is there
something else that
we can go out and say, here you have some more healthy stress you can do every day or almost
every day and that would also help on your metabolism? I figured, well, we actually,
Denmark is super lucky, we have winter swimmers going into the cold water, and they might actually have more
brown fat because the brown fat is activated by the most potent stressor, which is the cold.
What if their metabolism was actually faster or better, or in some sense, we could see a difference
between a group who were winter swimmers and between a group who was not?
And so Susanne, what did you discover?
What we found was that the winter swimmers who were adapted to the cold water
swimming, did short term cold exposure.
So very short dips.
And they had a better insulin sensitivity
and a faster glucose clearance from the blood.
So we tested that by giving them, you can say,
a glass of sugar water, and they drink that, fasted, and then we measure insulin and glucose
over two hours in both the groups, and that showed that the winter swimmers really rapidly had this increase in glucose, but also cleared very fast from
the blood. And when we look at how much insulin they had in the blood, they had lower insulin
levels compared to the control group. And some might think, why is this good for me? Well, it
good for me, well it shows that their body doesn't need to produce as much insulin to get the sugar into the cells. And that is a good thing because when you are insulin resistant, which is a state
that we want to avoid, then the body overproduces insulin because the cells cannot really feel the sugar. So getting more insulin
sensitive means that you don't have to produce as much insulin and that is what we saw in our
winter swimmers. They had lower levels of insulin and a faster glucose clearance from the blood.
They also had a faster activation of the brown fat and a higher activation of the brown fat. So they
were actually in a better temperature balance all the time and they were warmer peripherally. That
was another found because when I was done with the winter swimming study, I invited them to another
study where we studied their circadian rhythms.
So we had them sleep at our facility for a couple of days.
And we found out that the winter swimmers were peripherally actually warmer.
And Susanne, is that a good thing to be warmer?
It is a good thing to be warmer on your skin.
It shows that you can actually get a better blood circulation
of your skin, and you really want that.
So if I understand this rightly,
having done all this study,
you're saying you have these sort of two groups of people
who are matched on everything else,
and the ones who were suffering
the freezing cold Scandinavian sea
were just basically healthier than the other group,
and that was based on quite short periods of time also.
They weren't sort of going for a half hour swim.
How long did you have to be in the water
to qualify in this group and get this benefit?
After a year following them,
we saw that they did 11 minutes
of cold water immersion per week,
divided on two to three days,
and also 57 minutes of sauna per week and divided on two to three days and also 57 minutes of sauna per week
also divided on these two to three days. And on each of these days they did three dips in the water
and two sauna sessions. So if you divide this out it corresponds to one to two minutes in the cold water and
only 10 to 15 minutes in the sauna per sauna session.
So just to play it back, I go in the sauna for 10 minutes, I get really, really hot.
Then I go into the freezing sea for about 60 seconds.
I'm now really cold.
I go back to the sauna, get myself warm, and I basically repeat that three times,
and these people were doing this twice a week.
So it was about a sort of half an hour session
between these two twice a week.
And that was enough that you really saw this difference
between these two groups.
Yes, so they did it very briefly,
and you might ask yourself,
how can something that is so short and so brief
have any longer-term effects?
But that just shows how potent the cold and the heat is.
Extreme temperature can be a very good tool to activate your metabolism.
And that is what we want to do because it activates more mitochondria in our body and
we want to increase our mitochondria in the body because that is how we keep our cells younger and healthier
and how we activate something more nerdy
called the heat shock proteins in our cells.
And these heat shock proteins can actually repair our cells
from the inside.
So it's a way of keeping our cells younger or healthier
and they will survive longer,
and then that is your longevity, you can say.
So the cold is very potent, the heat is very potent,
but just be mindful how we use it.
It's not more is better.
That is definitely also a misconception out there
that I'm trying to help people with.
Less is more.
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I've done some cold plunges, unlike Jonathan.
That's because I'm a cold sissy.
I've now established that.
Definitely a cold sissy.
It's okay.
So why is the first 30 seconds the worst?
What changes after that 30 seconds?
Is it the brown fat or is it just your brain saying, okay, I'm not going to die.
This is fine.
I can carry on.
Why is sort of this general rule about three minutes in something that's less than eight degrees
or whatever the ice bath is that seems to be optimum.
The other one I've heard is that after a cold plunge, you should naturally try and rewarm
rather than jumping into a sauna or a hot shower.
We have to describe it for Jonathan because he can only imagine you see
what it's like. Everything is screaming at you to get out. Basically, your whole body,
your whole evolution, everything is saying you're in the wrong place. Everything hurts.
There's like a tight band around your chest. It's like you can't breathe. Get me out of
here.
Exactly.
And if you last that, if you can stay
there or someone's forcing you to stay in, then it suddenly gets easier. I'm interested
to see why we think that is. So when we activate the cold shock response,
and we do that immediately as we go into the cold water. And if you're new to this, you
will also activate your gasping reflex. So that's why you might have seen new B-School.
That might be you, Jonathan.
And I can tell you, I've been there many times.
You'll be like, and it's okay.
So just take the whole journey in and be okay with whatever comes out.
The cold shock is where your brain goes, oh my God, it's a control and delete button.
That is what I call it.
Because nothing in your body wants to do anything else but just survive.
Even your brain is actually zooming in totally on the now, which is a good thing because
all your worries, everything you just thought about before just is totally
deleted.
It's gone, it's away, and your body and brain is in the now.
After the 30 seconds of cold shock where you have to breathe through it, your body goes
into an activation of parasympathetic activation.
That's because you are activating your diving response as well, because you submerge into the cold water, right?
And when you do that, you will feel like you went from this awful stressful situation, which you could almost not breathe yourself through.
And then suddenly you feel like the world is like stopping or you're standing still and you cannot even understand how you were almost panicking 30 seconds ago
or one minute ago.
I feel like this is the point
where you have to build yourself up to.
It took me at least five attempts or even more,
I would say, before I was at that stage
where I felt completely calm.
You've talked quite a lot about sort of metabolic health,
about how it's helping with my blood
sugar and my insulin.
Are there any other benefits in your mind from doing this in terms of my health?
I think so, yeah.
So there is also the mental health part of it, but why I talk so much about the metabolism
is because your mental health is so connected to your metabolism. So we know that if
we can activate also our metabolism, we can decrease inflammation. And we know that depression,
anxiety, and we know that Alzheimer's disease are connected to as an inflammatory state also of the
brain. So we do really want to activate the brown fat because that's
going to affect our mental health as well. But what you can say the cold
water does immediately for your mental health is activating dopamine which will
give you that drive and that energy and new adrenaline which is our stress
response also will also give you that energy.
So the clarity it will give you afterwards, that is something you will feel immediately.
You cannot feel immediately that your inflammation is going down, right?
But it's all connected. So the immediate response of your mental health is there when you leave
and you can feel that drive, that energy, and
you will be definitely more focused.
I'd love to tie this back now to our initial questions at the beginning, because Tim, I
asked you this question that seemed mad and you said, well, actually, maybe it's true,
which is how this might impact our gut microbiome.
And I think anybody who's been listening to a lot of our shows knows that the gut microbiome is really central to our health and we understand that now. But it seems to me
like if there's one bit that ought to be insulated from hot or cold, it ought to be my gut. So,
how can this be having any impact on my microbiome and is it, Tim?
Well, your gut microbes are not going to feel the icy cold when you get in the bath. They are well
insulated from that. That's the reason they're there is they like a nice cozy home that keeps
the thermostat very closely regulated. The acidity level is just right. The mucus is nice and comfy.
Of course, your microbes pick up on the signals coming from the body. So they pick up on stress levels.
And as the microbes are talking to your immune system and your nervous system,
which are lining the gut, there's a two-way interaction.
So they're picking up anything that the nerve system is sending out as chemicals,
anything the immune system is sending out as chemicals, anything the immune system is sending out as chemicals. So we've heard this low levels of stress, which can be beneficial, this so-called
hormesis is something. And we know that microbes will respond to stress if it's too much, they go
in a bad way. But if the body is getting just the right levels of stress and perhaps reducing inflammation,
which I think is perhaps the critical thing here, then I think we should see this translated into
a happier microbiome that fits in with this. So I don't think we have any good studies to really show this yet, but theoretically, this is how I think
it could work. We know that the gut microbes are a bit of a barometer of what's going on
in the body. If they're in a bad way, they'll transmit anxiety, stress, inflammation. But
also the other way around, if the body is in a good state, its environment is in a good
state, just like it gets signals from food,
it will also get signals from the environment about exercise and temperature.
As Susanna is saying, it's a bit like having your body is having a bit of a workout.
And if that workout is just right, then it's getting the right signals and should improve it.
But it'd be lovely to do some really large scale studies
on this, you know, maybe with the Zoey data set,
as these practices get more common
and more people are getting hot and cold therapies.
And just very much on my mind as I'm listening to this,
I have a friend who suffered from depression in the past,
and he absolutely swears that his mood
is dramatically lifted by a cold plunge.
And this is a friend who has now
bought one for his garden and is absolutely committed. It's clear it works for him. But is
there any evidence more broadly about whether this affects mood and particularly people who have
sort of real mood disorders? Yeah, so there is actually, there is a study, I think it was from 2024, came out showing that people doing
cold plunges change the way that they have negative emotions.
So they have more positive emotions or positive thinking and positive emotions after they
have done a cold plunge.
It makes sense when you think about it because when you go
into the cold and you will have that increase in dopamine and no adrenaline, oxytocin, which
is also part of our stress response, and oxytocin is our, you could say, love hormone in the
body. When you increase those chemicals in the brain, it's got to be almost impossible
to be at the same brain state as you were before. You will always have maybe the same problems. They don't
disappear from cold water swimming, but you would have another way of thinking
about them. We all have our problems and worries, but the way that you address
them and think about them is how well you will handle them also. And I think
this study shows that from these brain scans,
that the code actually changes the activation of those sensors of the brain,
where you think about negative emotions and you have the positive emotions.
There are also some new studies.
I think we have a pilot study definitely also in Denmark
on people with depression going into cold water.
They saw that they could also get rid of their medication or maybe not.
They could just go down in medication dose.
It seems that there are studies coming also where we get more proof on pathologies, so
on diseases, brain diseases.
It could be depression, it could be anxiety, it could be a depression, it could be the
anxiety, it could be psychosis, it could be many things where they have used this cold
water immersion.
So I think more studies are coming, but there seems to be some good case studies also published,
one from UK where a woman had been swimming in cold water for three months who could actually
lay off all her depression medication.
And she was apparently heavily medicated.
Susanna, I'd love to switch to actionable advice now.
I think our listeners have been very patient with me and are like,
yeah, yeah, I want to actually understand what to do.
So if someone's listening to this, they've never done it before.
They didn't grow up in Scandinavia, so they weren't wild swimming
and jumping into a sauna the other time.
How can they integrate this into their lives?
And I'm also very interested in how can they start if they might be a cold sissy like me?
Yeah, so if you are a cold sissy like you or me, I think the best thing you can do is don't think too much about it, actually.
If you want to try it out, then go and try it out, but don't have expectations like I have to sit there for a while.
This is not a competition. Cold exposure is an inner journey. So you use some kind of cold exposure. I would say a cold plunge is
definitely a good place to go if you have that. The ocean if you have that. Or if you don't,
then a cold shower is also fine to get started. So a 30-second cold shower, use your nose to calm your nervous system. So breathe in through your nose
and out through your mouth if you need to. And if you can switch totally to nasal breathing,
that will help your nervous system to calm down as well. And you can use that also with
cold plunging. So breathe in through the nose to calm the nervous system and never do any hyperventilating
breath work before or during your cold plunges.
That is also, I think, important to note.
And head dunking, please don't do that because that would just decrease the blood flow to
the brain and it actually also increases the risk of fainting. And we also don't
want that. And you have no extra benefits of putting your head down in the water. You can splash
some water to the face, which will activate the vagus nerve. But dunking your forehead down
doesn't do any health benefits for you. So take it slow and feel what is good for you.
Breathe through 10 seconds and that is fine.
But try to get over the cold shock.
That is the goal.
So try and get past the first 30 seconds.
Yeah, I think the cold shock is it might actually be a little bit longer than that.
For new people, it could be up to one minute and for some one and a half,
depending on, yeah, how cold adapted you actually are in the first place. So back to the question
that Jonathan asked, so how different is this from people to people? And it can be actually
very different. So if you are used to being much outside, for example, then you get very quickly
adapted. But if you are not very much outside an outdoors person, then you would take a little bit longer
to get adapted to the cold.
So be gentle to yourself and don't compare yourself to others.
I like to have a sauna first, but does it make much difference, do you think?
You can start with the sauna and I mean, people should do it the way that they feel is best
for them.
But if you start in the cold water, you will have that
increase in oxytocin, noradrenaline, dopamine will change how you sit in the sauna because it's sort
of like a place where you meditate also. In order to get the health benefits, do I need to
combine a cold plunge and a hot sauna together? No, you don't have to combine them. The thing
about alternating between one extreme temperature and the other, like
this cold plunge in the sauna, is that you push your cardiovascular system.
And that is a workout for all your blood vessels.
That is one thing, but also going from one extreme to the other will push your
cells to either activate, to generate heat or to shut down. And that is also a workout for your
body. So in that sense, it has benefits doing it together. But if you just do cold plunges on one
day and soundness on other days, that is also getting the benefits. It's just more like divided,
you can say. Susanne, can I ask, our US listeners will know all about cryotherapy. And I was in
Los Angeles recently, and every shopping mall has a cryotherapy center now. So you
can just pop in and do your three minute cryotherapy session and go back to work.
So it's incredibly practical. You don't have to find a lake in the middle of a city and, you know, and shiver.
And yeah, and it's reverse because you go in and the first 30 seconds are quite fun.
And then it gets progressively colder because it's minus 100 degrees in this freezer.
And you come out after three minutes.
This last 30 seconds are tough.
But I got a similar buzz after it.
But I wonder, is there any science behind the difference?
But, you know, is it as impressive as the cold water stuff?
So there are studies showing that the cryotherapy
also activates your cold receptors, which means it also activates the brown fat.
And I think that the three minutes with these extreme temperatures,
it would definitely help on your metabolism. But of course, there are differences because when you
submerge into cold water, you also have that hydrostatic pressure from the water, which...
Yeah, and I didn't feel I was going to die either. That was the other thing.
So I didn't get the gasping or the sort of life-threatening feel of it.
It's not because the body needs to feel like it's dying in order for you to get the benefits.
You do get some benefits.
And I do think that the cryo actually has benefits.
It's just another modality.
It's just another dose that you get.
But you can say when you submerge into cold water, that is surrounding yourself with like the 100% molecules
around your body in cold, you cannot be packed more into cold.
So that's of course more potent to activate your metabolism
and of course also all your chemistry in the brain.
So we had another common question around this actually,
which is does a cold shower work at all?
Or does it need to be like a full plunge into icy water?
So cold showers work because you do get cold, of course, and you activate your cold receptors.
There's a study, a randomized control study from the Netherlands showing that if you do that for 30 seconds,
end your showers on 30 seconds cold showers, you will have less sick days at work.
It might be that it's not because you actually get less sick. It might actually be that you just get more energy to go to work.
I'm not sure about what exactly is going on there, but it's definitely not a bad thing that you feel fresh enough to go to work.
So it will activate your cold receptors, your brown fat, it will also activate
noradrenaline and dopamine and you will get that increase in your sympathetic
nervous system but it's probably not going to activate your parasympathetic
part of your nervous system and that is kind of what I would like people to
experience that they have this kind of what I would like people to experience,
that they have this kind of stress up
and also the stress down.
And what about the flip side, which is the sauna?
If you don't have a sauna,
is there any way you can get access to that?
Like, can you have a really hot bath or something,
or is there no alternative?
Yeah, so hot baths are actually very good.
There you also activate your parasympathetic part of your nervous system.
You don't have to sit that long in a warm bath to have also the metabolic benefits of
insulin, better insulin sensitivity and better glucose clearance.
That is also shown in studies that hot baths are really good for your metabolism.
If you cannot sleep,
just do a hot bath before you go to bed or do a hot sauna. That will increase your core temperature
and that will make your body go into the state of wanting to sleep. So don't do your cold baths
before you want to go to sleep because that increases your new adrenaline and then you maybe want to go for a run instead or you want to like start
working. It gives you too much energy so I always advise people to do the
cold plunges in the daytime.
Do you know someone who loves a long hot shower?
Send them this episode. With just the twist of a tap they could turn their
bathroom into a mood and metabolism boosting cold plunge.
The science in this episode will show them how and why it might even help them live longer.
I'm sure they'll thank you.
Now if somebody's getting a little bit more committed and they're like, no, I'm going
to figure out where I can do like a cold plunge and a sauna.
What is the minimum frequency?
How often a week do you need to do that?
And do you need to do it three times backwards and forwards in the way you described in your study in order to get benefits?
Is that what people should be looking to achieve?
I think that people should do what is possible.
It's like exercise.
So if you can run two kilometers or five kilometers, it's definitely better than not doing it at all.
So if you have time to do it once a week, then
that is good. There is probably like a dose relationship here. So you can do it
up to two, three times per week, but I also think that after doing that, it might
also be too much for you. So we don't want to exhaust the cells in our body
with too much stress. Susanne, can't want to exhaust the cells in our body
with too much stress.
And Susanne, can I just ask a follow up
just to understand that?
Because I think with exercise,
we're a bit used to this idea that
like more is somehow always better.
But here it sounds like you're saying,
like cold plunging every day might not be a good idea.
I don't know if every day is not a good idea,
but we do see from my studies at least that
doing two to three times a week is definitely enough to get the benefits.
So doing more, I don't know whether that is good for you and if it actually becomes too
much of a stressor for you.
It is very potent.
It is not exactly like exercise because exercise is, you can say, you can pause that and then you can lift your weights again, or you can pause when you run.
Here you are getting the full thing at once and doing that every day that it might not leave room for recovery in your body and you also don't want to exhaust your nervous system. So that is why I just
always say, well, at least we have studies showing two to three times a week is enough to get the
benefits. Makes sense as well because exercise also generally suggest a rest day in the week for
your body to recover. So it sort of makes sense that you don't overdo this as well and go crazy.
And about the cortisol level, because I think that all exercise,
exercise or cold plunge sauna all increases our cortisol level just a bit.
But what we do see and I think this is like one of the misconceptions
that I really want to get out there.
The cortisol is something that we have
to increase because that is our stress system. We are stressing the body a bit, but acutely
it's okay, but in the long term we don't want cortisol levels to be high. But what we see
from cold exposure and also from sauna, that cortisol level baseline goes down in the long
term when we do cold plunges and we do sauna.
So there's a good reason for doing this on a regular basis and not only looking at,
oh, when I do a cold plunge today, right now, I have a little bit of an increase in my stress.
But that is a good thing because it's just acutely, but in the long term, it will decrease your stress.
Can I come back to your question at the very beginning,
where you said the biggest misconception was that this wasn't good for women?
I didn't even realize that was a misconception.
Do men and women respond differently?
And is there any concern for women or for anybody else actually,
where what you're talking about today, you would say actually that isn't safe. So the misconception that women shouldn't cold plunge
has come out there somehow.
And I think it's important to say that
there is a difference in women's and men's physiology,
of course.
So our metabolism acts differently
when we go into cold water.
So women have more brown fat than men, and men have more
muscle mass than women. That evens out how we defend ourselves to the cold. When we go into
cold water, women have an ability to activate more brown fat, but also vasoconstriction is better in women.
So we can actually shut out the cold better than men can, but men have more muscle mass
to generate heat.
So it evens out.
So there's a study showing that men and women going into cold water, they activate their
metabolism, meaning they defend the cold equally, but how they do it is just different.
So that doesn't mean that women cannot do
co-plunches. It just means that we act in a different way towards it. And then there's
this thing about our cycle. Women are more stressed when we are in our luteal phase.
So it's important that we think about when we do the cold plunge. So if we
have our menstruation, for example, that is where we feel the most stressed. And also
people who do cold plunges or winter swimming, they probably notice that there are times
during their cycle where they feel a little bit more cold. They feel not able to conquer the stress in their
everyday life as good as they did just three weeks ago. And that is because of our changes in hormones.
So be gentle to yourself women when you are in that phase and probably do cold plunges,
but very briefly, or maybe just wait until you're over that phase, or maybe just take a cold shower.
So that people will need to figure that out for themselves.
And is there any one or any situation where you would tell people to be particularly
cautious about this and be concerned about the safety implications?
this and be concerned about the safety implications? Yeah.
So if you have heart diseases and if you have unregulated blood pressure, I don't recommend
that you do these kinds of stressors.
And if you are pregnant also, just skip it for these nine months.
I mean, if you were already doing cold and heat exposure, then the body will remember
it, but you don't have to do it those nine months
because we actually don't know exactly
what will happen to the fetus.
And we wanna of course protect that.
We cannot do studies where we randomize people.
But that is my advice to that.
I've heard that there's a sort of hack with your face
that can actually get you some access to a cold plunge without actually
doing a cold plunge?
If you pour water to your face, so wash your face in cold water, you can activate your
vagus nerve and that is activating the rest and digest part of your nervous system, which
is a good thing because that will stress you down.
Of course, you will also feel energized by it
because you will also activate your sympathetic part of your
nervous system, but eventually you will actually stress you
down. So it's a good quicker, like you say in the morning, if
you don't have time for a cold plunge, pour some cold water to
the face and you will have also sort of like a quicky cold face
plunge, you can say.
Yeah.
Susanne, a final question.
If you were going to say to somebody like this is the best way to start for
someone who's never done this, what would you advise them as the best way to get
into all of this?
If you are about to get started with cold plunging and sauna, I think you will need to figure out when to do it for firstly.
Don't be in a situation where you feel that you are about to get sick. You should feel well.
You should also feel not too stressed because it's going to stress your body the first few times mostly.
And think about the time of the day, do it in the daytime.
Preferably, I would say do it when you were
about to take a cup of coffee.
So if you don't drink coffee after five o'clock
in the afternoon, then don't do your cold plunges
after five o'clock in the afternoon.
Yeah, and always have someone with you
because doing it alone is not safe.
And use your breath to navigate your nervous system.
It's your steering, can you say, how to calm your nervous system down.
Amazing. Susanna, Tim, thank you so much.
I would like to try and do a quick summary and please both of you correct me if I got anything
is wrong. So the first thing that's still sticking in my mind is I actually do exercise by going to
the sauna even though I just sit there and do nothing, but apparently my heart is racing and
if I do this regularly, it's sort of like doing exercise without doing exercise. So I love that
because I'm always looking for a way to not have to do any exercise. So
I'm sold on that already. My second big takeaway, Suzanne, is I'm a cold sissy.
Like I knew that, but I didn't realize there was a technical term before. So I am a cold sissy.
But the good news is apparently you once were as well. So it sounds like it is possible to start
as one. It sounds like most of us probably do, because it's normal,
because actually the whole experience is,
you know, your body thinks it's going to die,
we don't expect one to do that.
And so what you describe is,
like the first time gasping and screaming is all all right,
you are stressing your body.
And the reason why you get these benefits
is because you're creating this stress.
And what tends to happen is you sort of have 30 second
of this real shock.
If you can get through that,
then I think you described this wonderful meditative calm
that you get out to on the other side.
But even then, interestingly, you aren't saying
then go and stay in this cold water for a really long time.
Everything you're talking about
is actually quite a short period of time,
you know, one or two minutes in the cold, then coming back. And so the optimum that you saw
in this research that was really delivering the results was two to three times a week,
where people actually get in a habit where they were combining sauna and cold plunge,
which I think was about sort of 10 minutes sauna, still just like one or two minutes of the cold plunge three times.
There is an easier way to get into this.
So you can just do a cold shower and that is going to already like create quite a few
of those impacts.
Make sure you're breathing through the nose because apparently if you're a cold sissy
like me, even that is going to be too much.
Interestingly, a hot bath on the other hand, which I've never felt as scared about,
has proven benefits and helps with sleep.
And then I think final thing I'm taking away is,
cryotherapy might work.
And I'll be honest, I've been a bit skeptical.
I always feel that anything that appears in the mall,
like, I don't know, I feel like,
I'm not sure I really believe it is a health impact,
but you're saying it might work
because there is a stress associated with it,
but it's probably going gonna have less health impact
than this ice plunge,
because actually you don't feel the full weight and pressure
and there is very little data yet.
So like you think it could well work,
but there's not a lot of proof.
The data is coming along more on sort of the cold plunge,
but even then your research is sort of key here
and it's still very early.
So there's a lot more still to explore.
Beautiful resume.
Yeah, beautiful.
Thank you so much.
Tim, I want to hear more about the impact on the microbiome as we discover more about
where that happens.
And Susanna, I hope that as your research continues, we can get you back again in the
future.
Oh, of course.
Thank you so much for having me.
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