ZOE Science & Nutrition - Most replayed moment: Ice Baths: Science or Fad? | Susanna Søberg & Prof Tim Spector
Episode Date: May 19, 2026Today, we’re diving into one of the most requested topics we’ve ever had: cold water therapy. Cold showers, ice baths and wild winter swimming have exploded in popularity over recent years with s...upporters claiming a range of health benefits. But are these claims actually backed by science, or is it all just another wellness fad? I’m joined by Dr. Susanna Søberg and Proffesor Tim Spector to break down the studies and discover if we could all do with a bit more ice in our life. 🌱 Try our science-backed and tasty wholefood supplement Daily 30+ Get our brand-new app and Gut Health Test designed by world-leading gut health and nutrition scientists to build healthy eating habits 👉 Join ZOE Follow ZOE on Instagram. 📚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 Ferment by Prof. Tim Spector Free resources from ZOE Eating for Better Brain Health: Your brain-gut blueprint How to eat in 2026 - Discover ZOE’s 8 nutrition principles for long-term health Live Healthier: Top 10 Tips From ZOE Science & Nutrition Gut Guide - For a Healthier Microbiome in Weeks Better Breakfast Guide
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Hello and welcome to Zoe Recap, where each week we find the best bits from one of our podcast episodes to help you improve your health.
Today, we're diving into one of the most requested topics we've ever had.
Cold water therapy. Cold showers, ice baths and wild winter swimming have exploded in popularity over recent years,
with supporters claiming a range of health benefits. But are these claims actually backed by science?
or was it all just another wellness fat?
I'm joined by Dr. Susanna Soberg and Professor Tim Specter
to break down the studies
and discover if we could all do with a bit more ice in our life.
The cold plunge.
What happens when I'm thinking about my own personal experience
of 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 no adrenaline to activate your brown fat.
And Susanna, 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 poles 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 increase 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 activated 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.
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 and this is so fascinating
it's a study from 2014 showing where the researchers had people who had a bad insulin sensitivity
and some of them were obese and some of them had tight two 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.
And 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 looked at the measure of the brown fat, you can see that it had increased.
And that was just from sleeping at 19 degrees in a cold room for a month.
Susanna, I'd love to switch to actionable advice now.
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 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 seconds 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 breathwork before or doing your
cold plunges. That is also, I think, important to note. And head don't think, please don't do
that because that would just decrease the bluff road 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 full head 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 how cold adapted you actually are in the first place.
So back to the question that Jonathan asked,
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.
And I like to have a sauna first, but does it make much difference, do you think?
You can, Tim, 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 have that increase in oxytocin, noradrenaline, dopamine
would 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 and 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 saunas on other days,
that is also getting the benefits.
It's just more like divided, you can say.
Susanna, 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 hop 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 shiverer, 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, 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 wondered, is there any science behind the difference?
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 it's 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.
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 co-receptors, your brown fat.
It will also activate no adrenaline 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.
of stress up and also the stress down.
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Thanks for listening.
