Far Infrared Heat Therapy for
Pain Relief
New clinical research on pain offers evidence to
establish a novel class of pain “heat responsive pain”
or HRP, which encompasses several common pain
conditions that can be treated with the use of heat
therapy. Researchers studying HRP have observed
remarkable therapeutic benefits by using continuous
low level heat therapy for treating lower back, upper
body and menstrual pain, all conditions that fall
under the new HRP classification.
“For centuries healthcare providers have used
topical heat to relieve minor aches and pains, but
today we are just beginning to understand the full
range of therapeutic benefits that heat offers,” said
pain expert Peter Vicente, Ph.D., past president of
the American Pain Society and Clinical Health
Psychologist, Riverhills Healthcare, Cincinnati, OH.
“Through new clinical research, we have found that
heat activates complex neurological, vascular and
metabolic mechanisms to mediate the transmission of
pain signals and effectively provide relief for a
variety of pain conditions.”
Rheumatoid Arthritis
A case study reported in Sweden involved a 70
year-old man who had rheumatoid arthritis secondary to
acute rheumatic fever. He had reached his toxic limit
of gold injections and his erythrocyte sedimentation
rate (ESR) was still 125. After using a far infrared
sauna for less than five months, his ESR was down to
11. A rheumatologist worked with a 14 year-old Swedish
girl who had difficulty walking downstairs due to knee
pain from the age of eight. This therapist told her
mother the girl would be in a wheelchair within two
years if she did not begin gold corticosteroid
therapy. After three far
infrared sauna treatments, she
began to become more agile and subsequently took up
folk dancing without the aid of conventional
approaches. A clinical study in Japan reported a
successful solution for seven out of seven cases of
rheumatoid arthritis treated with whole body far
infrared therapy. |