Saunas & Arthritis: Use Heat to Relieve Pain, Increase Mobility & Feel Better Now

Heat Treatment  Acute knee pain from arthritis

It’s no secret: a sauna’s heat can reduce pain and enhance well-being for arthritis sufferers.

Can a sauna cure arthritis? No. We’re not claiming that! But the heat of a sauna does ease pain, increase mobility, and enhance feelings of well-being when used with a range of other treatments including diet, exercise and medication.

Arthritis is the No. 1 cause of disability in the United States, and the men, women and children who suffer from it deserve the maximum relief possible. And, we feel, with the least medication possible.

In a report submitted to The Annals of Clinical Research Volume 20 in 1988, Dr. H. Isomäki discussed research results related to the benefits of sauna bathing for temporary relief of pain and increased mobility.  In the study, pain relief was attributed to a temporary increase in the release of nor adrenaline, adrenaline, coritsol and growth hormones (all of which have anti-inflammatory properties), as well as, an increased stress on the body, which releases endorphins, the body’s natural painkillers.  Of those studied, more than 50% of participants reported temporary relief of pain and an increase in mobility.  Mobility was increased since tissues largely comprised of collagen (tendons, fasciae, and articular capsules) become more flexible when exposed to increased temperatures.

Some people think that the increased blood circulation stimulated by heat also may loosen and remove mineral deposits from joints where they may have accumulated because of more sluggish blood flow although this has not been studied scientifically.

The heat also may help the body flush out toxins, including those in the pain-killing medications that many arthritis sufferers must use.

Here’s the bottom line on using a sauna to treat your arthritis:

Feeling better triggers an upward spiral – you become more active in the things you enjoy,which increase your sense of well-being, which encourages you to become more active.

Do you suffer from arthritis pain? Take a tip from a Finnleo sauna owner: “I am now 84 years old and have taken a daily morning sauna for decades,” one customer told Finnleo. “I use it to loosen up stiff joints before starting my day. Saunas have dramatically improved my quality of life and have allowed me to stay active much more than I would have without my daily sauna.”

Come try a Finnleo Sauna at any of our Olympic Hot Tub locations. You’ll feel the difference!

The Good Sweat starts with a Finnleo Sauna from Olympic Hot Tub.

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Public Sauna Etiquette-How to Sauna in a Hotel, Gym or Resort

Sweating in Public.  Fun? Relaxing? Or, social torture because you don’t know the rules?

Everything you need to know about sharing a sauna you learned in kindergarten. You just need to apply the rules to taking a sauna in a public place.

Health clubs and spas often have public saunas shared by strangers. They might be men only, women only, or mixed. The people who come to these rooms with hot rocks and wooden benches, maybe wearing no more than a towel, could be looking for detoxification or muscle relief as well as rest. If you’re going to relax in a place like that, everybody has to mind their manners. Here are some rules, including advice from Sauna Fin’s “Sauna Etiquette,” Home Saunas’ “Sauna Etiquette and Tips” and Sauna Community’s “Sauna Definition.”

COVER UP. Check the rules – you have to wear at least a towel, and some rooms require a swimsuit.

DON’T STARE. It’s just not kind..no matter what they’re wearing, or not.

BE CLEAN.  Shower before sauna so nobody has to smell your b.o. or the chlorine from the pool. It also keeps the furniture sanitary. Take an extra towel to sit on.

USE INSIDE VOICES. If you’re going to talk, keep the conversation quiet and don’t laugh or make loud noises that disturb others. If you’re listening to music, use a headset or earbuds so nobody else hears.  Feel free to tell somebody to turn it down if they break this rule.

SHUT THE DOOR.We want to keep the heat inside, so never hold the door open to talk to someone. Get in or get them out.

SIT STILL. It’s not an exercise room, and nobody wants you flinging sweat when you move around. If somebody breaks this rule, feel free to remind them.

When you sweat politely with others, everybody will have a relaxing time. Feel free to share any other tips you have for the right way to sauna in public.

The Good Sweat starts with a Finnleo Sauna from Olympic Hot Tub

Sauna Away Your Acne Naturally

Sweat. Rinse. Repeat.

Sauna regimen is a natural way to clear acne from the skin.  Since it’s National Healthy Skin Month, what better time to talk about saunas & clear skin.

Here’s how to do it the right way:

 While you’re relaxing in your Finnleo sauna, you can give your skin a workout to sweat away blackheads, pimples and other skin blemishes, making your face as clean and fresh as you feel. As long as you get hot enough to sweat – in a conventional Finnish-style sauna, infrared sauna, steam room or steam sauna – the “exercise” will work.

Take your favorite soap or facial cleanser; a brush, loofa or rough cloth for exfoliating your skin; and two towels, one to sit on and another for drying off.

First, take a hot shower and scrub the problem area gently with soap or cleanser, making sure to rinse it off well. Dry off and go relax in the sauna.

When you start sweating, in about five or 10 minutes, massage the problem area gently with the brush, sponge or cloth. Stay a couple more minutes to let the sweat wash away the dirt and dead skin. Rinse off in the shower – no soap – starting with warm water and turning it as cold as you find comfortable so your body gets to cool off. Dry off and relax until the sweating stops.

Now do it again: Back to the sauna, where you’ll start sweating more quickly, exfoliate again, sweat for a while, and shower again to cool off. Don’t use any soap, cleanser or lotions – your natural oils will do the work.

The mirror will show you that your skin is clearer than ever, and the regimen will keep you clear without using expensive acne treatments. That’s because the sauna frees the sebaceous glands to do their work. The glands make sebum, a waxy material that protects, moisturizes and feeds your skin cells, maybe even protecting them from disease, but when the glands are blocked, acne appears. Sweat helps the sebum flow, which unclogs pores.

Note: Don’t try this if you have cystic acne, and check with your doctor if you’re taking prescription medicine. If you fill lightheaded or ill during the sauna, stand slowly and go take a cool shower to lower your body temperature.

Put your perspiration to work for you, for cleaner, fresher skin without the cost of chemicals. Sweat while you relax – and relax while you sweat.

The Good Sweat starts with a Finnleo Sauna from Olympic Hot Tub

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Sauna Detoxification Program for Firefighters Improves Health

Firefighters have or will complete Travolta’s Detoxification Program.

That’s the headline on a story from the Ocala, Florida paper.

Whether or not you think John Travolta or Scientology has any merit, read the article to see what one small town fire department did for it’s firefighters and how much the firefighters appreciated the health intervention.

The key to the detoxification? Sauna sessions. Think about it…taking a daily sauna just might make you feel better!
Article By Dave Schlenker of the Ocola paper.

Helen Hunter recently jumped into the local roller-derby circuit.

This is an appropriate footnote about the always-on-the-go Ocala firefighter. Hunter is pushing 40, and she smiles at the mere thought of derby competition.

She will tell you with complete conviction the healthier she is, the better she can fight fires for the taxpayers who pay her salary. She is passionate about performing at her best, physically and mentally.

And that’s how John Travolta came into her life.

Hunter and 14 other local firefighters recently completed – or are completing – an extensive detoxification program funded by $26,000 that Travolta and his wife Kelly Preston raised at their Ocala “From Paris With Love” gala in April 2010.

The detoxification requires daily saunas, niacin pills, showers, aerobic exercise, more saunas and then more showers. The idea is to cleanse the body of toxins and other harmful substances.

Hunter was in good health before she opted for detoxification. But, being a firefighter for 16 years, she has been exposed to toxins and suffers from achy joints from hauling equipment and climbing out of fire trucks.

“A week into it, my joint pain was gone,” she said last week of the detoxification program. She also touts another notable result: “Overall mental clarity; stress just effuses away.

“Something positive happened every day.”

So what, exactly, is detoxification?

“This is not a health program, it is a wellness program,” said Brett Miller with the Heroes Health Fund, a nonprofit group that helps fund detoxification programs. “We work with medical professionals.”

It is an extensive, month long (more or less) regime designed to rid the body of harmful substances and amp up energy. This detoxification program is based on a book by Church of Scientology founder L. Ron Hubbard. It is not, advocates stress, a Scientology program.

Travolta, a faithful Scientologist who lives in Anthony, Florida has helped start similar programs elsewhere in the United States and vowed to do the same with seed money from the “Paris” party.

Toxins are stored in the body’s fatty tissue, where they are excreted by sweating, explained Dr. George Yu, a surgeon and professor at George Washington University who champions detoxification.

But the treatment has critics who contend it is unproven and lacks necessary medical research. Dr. Frank Fraunfelter, medical director for city and county fire departments, has many reservations.

“From my perspective, there is a lack of hard evidence. I, as a physician, would not recommend it,” said Fraunfelter, whose job covers Marion County Fire Rescue and the cities of Ocala, Dunnellon and Belleview.  He wants more information, particularly on the vitamins used and the daily niacin dosages. Too much niacin can be toxic, he said.

He strongly advises potential participants to consult with their personal physicians.

Advocates and participants say personal physicians are, indeed, part of the process. Hunter said she had to consult with her doctor and get his permission before starting the program. She also consulted with her personal trainer, who helped monitor her progress and endurance along with people from the program.

She said there were constant health assessments. One woman served as a “sauna supervisor” to make sure nobody was overdoing it, she said. They also kept daily journals.

“They just wanted to keep us healthy,” Hunter said.

Locally, 11 men and four women were selected for the program. Miller said applicants were screened with blood tests and medical exams before being accepted. Medical professionals also compiled thorough toxin-exposure histories, he added.

“I will admit it was tough,” said Ocala Fire Operations Chief Jim Ganter, who also went through the program. He had no reservations going into it, thinking – at the very least – he would be exercising often.

Like Hunter, his aches and pains subsided; plus, he said, “mentally, I seem even more crisp.”  He said he even noticed his dry skin – a problem since childhood – cleared up early into treatment.

City firefighters were allowed to use their sick leave for the program, and Hunter took off all 33 days of treatment. Others did the same, but some whose work is less physical and office-bound – such as Ganter – went to work after the morning detoxification sessions. He said he also worked some weekends to make up the time.

County fire Chief Stuart McElhaney said the detoxification treatments were “not really a county program,” but his department accommodated the few county fire personnel who participated.  Like the city, those who continued to work through the program were not front-line fire responders.

McElhaney said he is not 100 percent sold on detoxification, but noted some of workers who participated said they thought they felt better.

Hunter, though, has no doubts about detoxification.

After the treatment, she discussed her experiences in a video. In it, she was asked if she wanted to say anything to the Travoltas for bringing the program to Ocala. Upon recalling her words, the rumble-and-tumble firefighter paused before speaking.

“I thanked them hugely for the opportunity to do this,” she said, fighting back tears. “For these people to do something like that off the cuff was amazing. It was a totally selfless act. That’s why there was no quitting.”

We continue to hear good things about the detoxification power of sauna use from our Olympic Hot Tub sauna owners.  Maybe it has to do with sticking to a daily regime.  Maybe it has to do with making other dietary and wellness changes. There is one thing we know for sure: sweating is good for you. There’s no debate about that!

The Good Sweat starts with a Finnleo Sauna from Olympic Hot Tub.

Relax for Life™

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How to Ruin Your Electronics: The Heat & Moisture in a Sauna Will Do It!

How to ruin your electronics with heat & moisture? It’s easy & requires no thought. Take them in the sauna with you.

Probably without thinking about it, you’re using the sauna at home or in the gym with your electronics in hand.

The day has come for you to stand up (or lie down) for gadget-free relaxation.  Bite the bullet and find our why.

You bought your Finnleo sauna so you can get away from it all.  Getting away from your gadgets –iPods, iPhones, iPads and their cousins – can mean more quality relaxation time that’s better for you, and better for the electronics, too. The sauna qualities that help you feel better are hard on them.

Can’t stand the heat.

Electronic equipment is made to work at room temperature – a normal room, not a sauna. Apple, for example, recommends no exposure above 95°F. For one thing, heat above 105°F speeds up the rusting that shortens a battery’s life. Temperatures above 158°F can damage the display. On top of that, the materials in the device expand and contract at different temperatures, and the wide degree swings, from outside the sauna to inside and back again, can put stress on the circuit board and connections.

If it’s not the heat, it’s the humidity.

Sure, your sauna is dry – about 5 percent relative humidity, maybe 25 percent if you throw water on the rocks. But that’s all relative – hot air can hold more water than cooler air. That’s why dew forms when the temperature drops at night. So when you leave the sauna, the moisture inside your device can condense, corroding the electronics, discoloring the display, and voiding the warranty. And the cooling device will draw in surrounding air, which could mean even more moisture if you’re near a pool or shower.

The phone is smart enough to hold your calls, and you’ll have plenty of time to fool with Facebook later. Take care of your gadgets by keeping them out of the sauna – and take care of yourself by getting plenty of relaxation time inside.

The Good Sweat starts with a Finnleo Sauna from Olympic Hot Tub Company.

Olympic Hot Tub’s Annual Gigantic Warehouse Clearance Sale-Saturday, June 9th 9AM-2PM

Terrific savings–One day only!

Saturday, June 9th from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m.

Olympic Hot Tub’s Annual Gigantic Warehouse Clearance Sale

12818 Gateway Drive

Seattle, WA  98168-3311

Donuts & coffee served at our Warehouse in Tukwila

If you’re a hot tub owner:

Hot tub covers–$75 Off ◊ Filters–$6-$10 Off
SeaKlear Water Care Products–20% Off
Replacement Jets & Hot Tub Parts–15% Off
Cover Lifters–20% Off ◊ Spa Umbrellas–$100 Off
   
Addtional one-of-a-kind items on clearance too!

Looking for a hot tub or sauna?

Refurbished hot tubs &

selected 2011 tubs & saunas

Great selection of newly refurbished hot tubs available starting at $2895.

On display at the Warehouse
Final few 2011 tubs & saunas priced to clear

First come, first served! DON’T MiSS THIS EVENT!

New hot tubs & saunas at BIG savings

Save $1,100-$1,400 on Hot Spring Spas

purchased with our exclusive ACE Salt Water System

Save $500 on Finnleo Infrared Saunas

The safest in the industry!

Save $500-$800 on Finnleo Traditional Steam Saunas

Special pricing on wireless music, steps, SpaStone cabinets, umbrellas, SmartDecks & more!

 NEW HOT TUBS & SAUNAS ON SALE IN ALL FIVE RETAIL STORES


Truth or Fiction: Does Sauna Use Remove Toxic Chemicals From the Body? New Study to Find Out.

A study commissioned by the NIH  is testing sauna effects on stored toxic chemicals in the body.  Will sauna sessions help detox these harmful chemicals from the body to result in better health? That’s the big question.

The National Institutes of Health is sponsoring research at Bastyr University near Seattle to determine the effects of sauna use on toxic environmental chemicals in the body.

Dr. Jason Allen, the lead researcher, is testing whether the sauna helps break down the fatty tissues that can store more than 200 synthetic chemicals. When the chemicals are released from the tissues, the body can excrete them.

Those chemicals, accumulated in the body, are linked to such diseases as cancer, heart disease, obesity and infertility, as well as birth defects and developmental problems – and there is no known way to remove them. The effect on individuals depends on both genetic and environmental factors.

Allen has built a sauna that combines a traditional heater and radiant heating panels for the three-week study.

One group of people will use the sauna for two hours at a time five days a week, another group one hour at a time three days a week. A third group, for control, will not use the sauna.

The groups using the sauna will be monitored for health and mood, and blood tests will monitor their PCB levels.

“Products are out there that slowly degrade in the environment and accumulate in humans, particularly in fat,” Allen told a Seattle radio station. “So in this study, we picked one chemical that’s detectable in 100 percent of the human population, in fact 100 percent of the mammalian population, and those are PCBs.

PCBs, once common chemicals in electrical components, were banned in 1979 in the United States and in 2001 around the world, but Allen says more than 80,000 untested chemicals are still used in manufacturing.

If the study demonstrates a reduction in chemicals from sauna use, we’ll know that the healthy glow you gain from your session is much more than skin deep. Stay tuned.

The Good Sweat starts with a Finnleo Sauna from Olympic Hot Tub Company

 

 

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Finnleo Infrared Sauna featured on DIY Channel Show “I Hate My Bath”

Every good bathroom deserves a Finnleo Sauna.  That’s the word from the DIY’s I Hate My Bath Show which is featuring a Finnleo Infrared Sauna in  an upcoming episode  starting this Saturday at 11AM.  (Channel 203 on Comcast)

Did you know that installing a sauna in a bathroom is the hottest thing in home remodeling projects? In this episode called “Au Naturale”, the homeowner and I Hate My Bath producers chose a Finnleo Infrared Sauna (a B200) for the flexibility and the diminutive size that was just right for this project  The producers were impressed by Finnleo’s reputation as the largest sauna company in the world and the clean design of their infrared saunas.

The homeowners wanted to get rid of their old 60′s era Pink Bath and transform it into a beautiful modern bathroom complete with custom shower, custom vanity and a 2-person Finnleo infrared sauna. On the show, host Jim Devlin shows how  painless it can be to put in a sauna in your own home.  The recent surge in awareness of the health benefits of  saunas played a part in producers selecting a sauna for the episode.

The homeowners chose a cedar  sauna to go with the Asian feel and darker woods and stone used throughout the new bath design.

Upcoming airtime on DIY Network (Channel 203) where you can catch the episode called “Au Naturale” episode 112 / I Hate My Bath:

  • February 18th (This Saturday) at 11:00 a.m. E/P
  • February 26th 10:30 a.m. E/P
  • March 10th 6:30 p.m. E/P
  • March 11th 1:00 p.m. E/P
  • March 15th 7:30 p.m. E/P

Set your recording device to record one of these times and watch this bathroom transformation.  To find out more about I Hate My Bath, click  I Hate My Bath.  There’s plenty of inspiration on the show to help you envision your own bathroom paradise.

If you hate your bath, call a reliable bath remodeling contractor like Sound Kitchen and Bath. Tell them you want a beautiful new bathroom with a Finnleo Infrared Sauna.  Here’s a guide to buying the right infrared sauna-the first time.

The Good Sweat starts with a Finnleo Sauna from Olympic Hot Tub Company.

 

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Sauna May Give Your Heart A Boost Says New Medical Study

Sauna may give your heart a boost.  That’s big news for chronic heart failure patients.

A new study has found that people with chronic heart failure who took five sauna baths a week for three weeks enjoyed improved heart function and a boost in their exercise endurance.

New research reveals a surprising new therapeutic benefit to relaxing in a sauna: getting hot and sweaty cannot only release “happiness molecules” like serotonin but also help your heart.

Last month the weekly British science magazine New Scientist reported on the research, which found that people with chronic heart failure who took five sauna baths a week for three weeks enjoyed improved heart function and a boost in their exercise endurance.

In the study, researcher Takashi Ohori and colleagues at the University of Toyama in Japan asked 41 volunteers with heart failure to take a 15-minute sauna fives time a week for three weeks. After the sauna treatment, participants were asked to wrap themselves in a blanket for 30 minutes to keep their body temperatures about 1.8° F higher than normal.

“Sauna treatment increased the heart’s ability to pump blood, and boosted the distance participants could walk in 6 minutes from 1100 feet to 1250 feet-an improvement of almost 9%,” wrote New Scientist. And, that’s in only 3 weeks.

The researchers also found improved function in the membrane lining the inside of the heart, which plays a role in controlling the diameter of blood vessels. The findings were published in The American Journal of Cardiology.

Separate research has found that a sauna treatment can trigger neurons in your body to release serotonin, resulting in a feel-good sensation thanks to the increase in body temperature.

THE GOOD SWEAT STARTS WITH A FINNLEO SAUNA FROM OLYMPIC HOT TUB COMPANY

 

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Infrared Sauna Light Therapy Helps Those Affected by Seasonal Affective Disorder (S.A.D.)

It’s that time of year when darkness descends like a heavy blanket beginning in mid-afternoon in the Pacific Northwest. For some people, it also brings a strong urge to stay in bed and wait for spring.

If you feel like heading back to bed and suffer from depression, it maybe that you have SAD.  Seasonal affective disorder, or SAD, affects an estimated 6% of Americans, causing depression, lethargy, irritability and a desire to avoid social situations.

It can also create an urge to overeat, particularly carbohydrates. As many as 15% of people in the U.S. may have a milder version that includes only some of these symptoms. The incidence rises along with the distance from the equator: Roughly 8% of Canadians, 10% of Britons and as many as 20% of Scandinavians suffer from SAD this time of year. So calculate that at least 15% of Seattleites suffer from SAD.

Despite decades of study, experts still aren’t sure exactly what causes SAD, which is officially recognized as a form of major depression that lessens in spring and summer. The seasonal and geographic patterns provide strong clues that it’s related to the diminishing daylight in the fall and winter.

One theory suggests that the reduced light disrupts peoples’ circadian rhythms, the 24-hour biological clock that governs waking, sleeping and many other body functions. Another theory holds that the darkness wreaks havoc with neurotransmitters-brain chemicals that affect mood. Some experts believe the reduced sun exacerbates vitamin D deficiencies. It may also be that SAD has several different causes.

There are other mysteries, too. Why do SAD symptoms tend to peak in January and February, even though days are lengthening by then? Why does it hit most prominently between the ages of 18 and 30, and why are women three times as likely as men to be affected? The incidence of SAD is also surprisingly low in Iceland, where the homogeneous population leads experts to surmise that genetic factors may also play a role.

Some people who have symptoms of SAD don’t recognize them as part of a disorder. “Most people with winter depression blame themselves, or attribute it to something else-to not liking the cold or bad family experiences at Christmas time, or school or work stress,” says Michael Terman, director of the Center for Light Treatment and Biological Rhythms at Columbia University Medical Center in New York.

There are many treatments that can alleviate SAD symptoms. Most experts say that if you have mild winter blues, it’s fine to try any of these remedies on your own. But if you have severe depression, whether it’s related to seasonal patterns or not, consult a mental-health expert.

Light therapy, using beams many times more intense than normal light, is the most common treatment.  The most extensively studied treatment that is sitting before an intense light for 15 to 20 minutes daily. The theory is that when the sun rises later each day, people’s circadian clocks tend to slip later, too, since they’re regulated by light hitting the retina. But because most people have to wake up at the same time year-round, their bodies fall out of sync, which can bring sleep and mood disturbances.

Light therapy can relieve symptoms in 80% of SAD cases, Dr. Terman says. It’s most effective when timed to fit a person’s individual circadian rhythm, ideally starting about eight hours after the pineal gland starts secreting melatonin, the hormone that stimulates sleep. That varies widely from person to person, depending on whether you’re a night owl or a morning lark.

You can calculate your own melatonin onset point by taking the “morningness/eveningness” test on the Center for Environmental Therapeutics website , a nonprofit group of researchers studying light and circadian rhythms. (The test showed that I am a “definite evening” person).

If you suffer from SAD, check out Finnleo Infrared Saunas. You’ll be able to take a sauna in red, blue or green light that will help your SAD. Many of our Finnleo owners report that regular sauna use lifted their depression and rekindled their zest for life.

With the proper timing and dosing of light therapy, SAD sufferers should start to see their depression lift in as little as three days, says Dr. Terman, one of the founders of CET. He recommends using light therapy daily for at least three weeks. In some cases, symptoms can return without continuous usage.

THE GOOD SWEAT begins with a Finnleo Sauna from Olympic Hot Tub Company.

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