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Cold Therapy – Effects, Uses and Benefits

Cold therapy is the targeted use of cold to relieve pain, reduce inflammation, and support recovery from injuries. It is widely used in medicine, rehabilitation, and sports.

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Things worth knowing about "Cold Therapy"

Cold therapy is the targeted use of cold to relieve pain, reduce inflammation, and support recovery from injuries. It is widely used in medicine, rehabilitation, and sports.

What is Cold Therapy?

Cold therapy (also known as cryotherapy) is a therapeutic method that uses cold temperatures applied to body tissue to relieve pain, reduce inflammation, and promote healing. It is one of the oldest treatment approaches in medicine and is used today across clinical settings, sports medicine, and rehabilitation programs.

Mechanism of Action

Applying cold to the body causes vasoconstriction – a narrowing of the blood vessels in the treated area. This reduces blood flow, limiting swelling and internal bleeding. At the same time, cold slows down nerve conduction, which dampens pain signals. Additional effects include:

  • Reduction of local metabolic activity
  • Relief of muscle spasms
  • Inhibition of inflammatory processes
  • Increased blood flow after the cold stimulus subsides (reactive hyperemia)

Forms of Application

Local Cold Applications

Local cold therapy targets a specific area of the body. Common methods include:

  • Ice packs and cooling pads: Widely used for acute sports injuries, bruises, and strains
  • Cooling gels and cold sprays: Provide rapid topical pain relief
  • Cryotherapy chambers: Short whole-body exposure to very low temperatures (down to -110 °C), used in sports medicine and rheumatology
  • Cryosurgery: Targeted freezing of tissue to remove skin tumors, warts, or abnormal cells

Whole-Body Cold Therapy

During whole-body cryotherapy, a patient spends two to four minutes inside a specialized cold chamber. The extreme cold stimulates the nervous system, triggers the release of endorphins, and can positively influence inflammatory conditions such as rheumatoid arthritis.

Indications

Cold therapy is used for a wide range of complaints and medical conditions:

  • Acute sports injuries (e.g., sprains, muscle tears)
  • Chronic pain syndromes (e.g., back pain, fibromyalgia)
  • Inflammatory joint conditions (e.g., rheumatoid arthritis)
  • Postoperative swelling and pain
  • Skin conditions (e.g., warts, basal cell carcinoma in cryosurgery)
  • Recovery support in competitive sports

Application and Dosage

The duration and intensity of cold therapy depend on the treatment goal and individual tolerance. General guidelines include:

  • Ice packs: 10–20 minutes, always use a cloth barrier to protect the skin
  • Cryotherapy chamber: 2–4 minutes at -110 °C to -140 °C
  • Cold spray: brief application of a few seconds

Between applications, the skin should be allowed to fully rewarm to prevent frostbite.

Contraindications and Risks

Cold therapy is not suitable for everyone. The following conditions are considered contraindications:

  • Circulatory disorders (e.g., peripheral arterial disease)
  • Cold allergy or cold urticaria
  • Raynaud syndrome
  • Open wounds or skin infections
  • Severe heart conditions
  • Pregnancy (for whole-body cryotherapy)

Possible side effects include skin redness, tingling sensations, and in extreme cases frostbite if the application is too prolonged or ice is applied directly to unprotected skin.

Scientific Evidence

The effectiveness of cold therapy is scientifically supported for several indications. Studies demonstrate positive effects on pain and swelling particularly in acute injuries, postoperative conditions, and rheumatic diseases. The evidence base for whole-body cryotherapy in fibromyalgia and sports recovery is growing, though some aspects are still considered preliminary.

References

  1. Bleakley, C. M. et al. (2012): The use of ice in the treatment of acute soft-tissue injury. British Journal of Sports Medicine. PubMed PMID: 14514537.
  2. Bettoni, L. et al. (2013): Effects of 15 consecutive cryotherapy sessions on the clinical output of fibromyalgia patients. Clinical Rheumatology, 32(9), 1337–1345.
  3. World Health Organization (WHO): Rehabilitation – physical and rehabilitation medicine. www.who.int/health-topics/rehabilitation.

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