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Finland: spa treatments at 110 ยบ below zero!

Finnish spaIf the idea of traditional winter swimming fails to excite you, try spending three minutes in temperatures of up to 110 degrees below zero! The luxurious Finnish Haikko Spa located less than 50km east of Helsinki has turned an old pain relieving method into an energising spa treatment subjecting the body to extremely cold conditions and causing the skin’s surface temperature to drop down to between 3 and 4 degrees centigrade. The use of low temperatures in medical therapy is known as cryotherapy. Initially developed in Japan in the late 1800s to provide pain relief for conditions such as rheumatism, sports physicians have since rediscovered the method and have started applying it in routine treatments and sports therapy. It wasn’t long before health specialists, particularly in Eastern Europe, started to recognise the positive effects on a range of health problems such as insomnia, stress and skin conditions. In 2003, the Haikko Spa in Porvoo, Finland became the first Finnish spa to offer super cold treatments and the first cryo-treatment unit in the world to use a combination of electricity and liquid nitrogen to create the necessary cold temperatures. Guests are recommended to wear a swimming costume and protective headgear, mittens, socks and slippers provided by the spa. The trained staff will supervise the treatment which involves walking through two insulated rooms with temperatures of -30 and -60 ยฐC before entering the super cool treatment room where temperatures will drop down to -110 ยฐC. Here guests will spend from between one to three minutes, depending on the specific recommended treatment. ย Whilst exposed to such cool conditions, the temperature receptors in the skin send messages to the brain communicating the low temperatures. This triggers reactions in the circulatory, endocrine, immune and central nervous systems which gives a distinctive physical rush.

Paul Johnson

Paul Johnson is Editor of A Luxury Travel Blog and has worked in the travel industry for more than 30 years. He is Winner of the Innovations in Travel ‘Best Travel Influencer’ Award from WIRED magazine. In addition to other awards, the blog has also been voted “one of the world’s best travel blogs” and “best for luxury” by The Daily Telegraph.

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3 Comments

  1. I think you need to check your Fahrenheits and Centrigrades on teh Finnish Haikko Spa article. -110C would kill anyone. Even -30C seems like a lot. I saw nothing under -10C on their website.

  2. Hi Tee

    I know it sounds unbelievable but the figures are correct. They don’t appear to mention the cryotherapy on their website at all (at least not on the English version that I could see).

    However, have a read of https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cryotherapy – there you will notice it states:

    Cryogenic chamber therapy is a treatment whereby the patient is placed in a cryogenic chamber for a short duration (i.e. no more than three minutes, which is comparable to ice swimming), and if used properly, will not destroy tissue… The chamber is cooled, typically with liquid nitrogen, to a temperature of รขยˆย’110 ร‚ยฐC (รขยˆย’166.0 ร‚ยฐF). The patient is protected from acute frostbite with socks, gloves and mouth and ear protection, but in addition to that, wears nothing but a bathing suit. The patient spends a few minutes in the chamber. During treatment the average skin temperature drops to 12 ร‚ยฐC (54 ร‚ยฐF), while the coldest skin temperature can be 5 ร‚ยฐC (41 ร‚ยฐF). The core body temperature remains unchanged during the treatment, however it may drop slightly afterwards. Therapy triggers the release of endorphines which induce analgesia (immediate pain relief).

    Also see this article at https://www.mywire.com/a/Newsweek/Frozen-Smooth/13099019/ which makes specific reference to both the temperatures and to Hotel Haikko Manor and Spa.

  3. There is no mistake on this article. -110 Celsius is correct, my wife went there and says itยดs fantastic. You have to wear shoes, gloves and a hat of course, but you wonยดt die trying. :)

    BR,
    Tomi

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