Other Archives - Kristina Karo https://kristinakaro.com/category/other/ Don’t Let Technology Get to You Mon, 08 Jun 2026 09:27:36 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=7.0 https://kristinakaro.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/03/icons8-k-128-1.png Other Archives - Kristina Karo https://kristinakaro.com/category/other/ 32 32 Why Cold Plunges After Saunas May Be Ruining Your Recovery (And What to Do Instead) https://kristinakaro.com/sauna-cold-plunge-timing-muscle-recovery-science/ Sun, 03 May 2026 09:17:13 +0000 https://kristinakaro.com/?p=67 The sauna-to-cold-plunge ritual has become one of the most iconic wellness routines of the 2020s, popularized by biohackers, athletes, and podcasters alike. The logic seems unassailable:...

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The sauna-to-cold-plunge ritual has become one of the most iconic wellness routines of the 2020s, popularized by biohackers, athletes, and podcasters alike. The logic seems unassailable: heat opens blood vessels, cold closes them, and the contrast pumps blood through your body like a cardiovascular piston. But a growing body of research is complicating this picture — particularly for people who train hard and care about muscle adaptation.

The Anabolic Blunting Problem

In 2015, a landmark study published in the Journal of Physiology demonstrated that cold water immersion after resistance training significantly blunted muscle hypertrophy and strength gains over 12 weeks compared to active recovery. The mechanism is clear: cold constricts blood vessels and reduces the inflammatory signaling that is necessary for muscle protein synthesis. Essentially, you’re cooling down the very biological fire that builds muscle.

More recent research has extended this concern to the sauna-cold sequence. While the sauna itself does not blunt muscle growth, immediately following it with cold immersion may negate some of the hormonal and vascular benefits, particularly the growth hormone surge (which can increase 2–5x during a sauna session) by rapidly normalizing body temperature before that signal is fully processed.

When the Cold Plunge Does Work

This doesn’t mean cold plunges are bad. Context is everything. For endurance athletes, contrast therapy genuinely accelerates recovery by flushing lactate and reducing delayed-onset muscle soreness (DOMS). For non-training days, the cold plunge provides powerful mental and nervous system benefits, norepinephrine spikes of up to 300% have been recorded, improving mood, focus, and stress resilience. For injury recovery, cold reduces localized inflammation effectively.

The problem is applying a single protocol universally across all contexts.

The Optimal Timing Framework

Research suggests a simple rule: separate your cold plunge from your post-workout sauna by at least 4–6 hours if muscle growth is your goal. Do your sauna within 60–90 minutes post-training to maximize growth hormone and cardiovascular benefits, then allow your body to return to baseline naturally. Save the cold plunge for the following morning.

If you’re using the sauna purely for relaxation and cardiovascular health (not post-workout), the cold plunge immediately after is not only safe but beneficial — it trains vascular elasticity and activates the parasympathetic nervous system for deep recovery.

The Broader Lesson

The popularity of the sauna-cold plunge combo has outrun the science. This is a pattern common in wellness culture: a practice that is genuinely beneficial gets universalized into a one-size-fits-all protocol, losing its nuance in the process. The sauna is one of the most researched wellness tools in existence, it deserves to be used with the same precision we apply to training, nutrition, and sleep.

Heat and cold are powerful medicines. Timing is the dose.

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Sweat Out Toxins — The Real Benefits of Sauna Detox https://kristinakaro.com/sauna-benefits-detox-heart-health-sweating/ Mon, 02 Mar 2026 10:25:21 +0000 https://kristinakaro.com/?p=61 You’ve probably heard someone say, “I need to sweat it out,” after a long week. Turns out, there’s more truth to that than you might think....

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You’ve probably heard someone say, “I need to sweat it out,” after a long week. Turns out, there’s more truth to that than you might think. Saunas have been used for thousands of years — from Finnish bathhouses to Turkish hammams — and modern science is starting to back up what ancient cultures already knew: sweating is good for you.

What Actually Happens in a Sauna?

When you step into a sauna, your body temperature rises quickly. Your heart rate picks up, your blood vessels dilate, and your sweat glands kick into high gear. Within minutes, you’re sweating — and that’s exactly the point.

Your skin is your body’s largest organ, and it plays a real role in elimination. Sweat contains trace amounts of heavy metals like lead, cadmium, and arsenic, as well as BPA (a chemical found in plastics) and other environmental pollutants. While your liver and kidneys do the heavy lifting when it comes to detox, your skin acts as a helpful backup system — and saunas push that system into overdrive.

The Benefits Go Beyond Detox

Detox is just one piece of the puzzle. Regular sauna use has been linked to a surprisingly wide range of health benefits.

  • Cardiovascular health: A long-term Finnish study found that men who used saunas 4–7 times per week had a significantly lower risk of heart disease. The heat puts mild stress on your heart — similar to light exercise — which strengthens it over time.
  • Muscle recovery: Athletes have used saunas for decades to ease sore muscles. Heat increases blood flow to tired muscles, speeding up recovery after a tough workout.
  • Better sleep: A sauna session in the evening can help your body wind down. The drop in body temperature after you cool off signals to your brain that it’s time to sleep.
  • Stress relief: Heat triggers the release of endorphins — the same feel-good chemicals released during exercise. It’s hard to feel tense when you’re melting in a warm room.
  • Skin clarity: Sweating opens up your pores and flushes out dirt and dead skin cells, leaving your skin looking cleaner and brighter.

How to Sauna the Right Way

You don’t need to sit in a 90°C room for an hour to get the benefits. Start with 10–15 minute sessions at a moderate temperature, then work your way up. Most people find that 2–3 sessions per week is enough to notice a real difference.

The golden rule: stay hydrated. You can lose up to a litre of fluid in a single session, so drink water before, during, and after. Avoid alcohol before a sauna — it dehydrates you and raises your risk of overheating.

If you have a heart condition, are pregnant, or take blood pressure medication, check with your doctor before starting a sauna routine.

The Bottom Line

A sauna isn’t a magic cure, but it’s one of the most enjoyable and effective wellness tools out there. It supports your body’s natural detox systems, helps your heart, eases muscle tension, and melts away stress — all while you just sit there and relax. That’s a pretty good deal.

So next time you feel like you need to “reset,” skip the fad juice cleanse and head to the sauna instead. Your body will thank you.

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