An exterior view of the Rejuvenice spa is shown in Las Vegas, Oct
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From Japan to Europe and now in the U.S., a growing number of people are seeking cryotherapy ' a treatment that subjects their bodies to temperatures far below those found anywhere on Earth.
Backers claim it can ease pain and inflammation, aid blood flow and weight loss, improve skin and even ward off aging and depression.
The treatments, however, have come under scrutiny after a Las Vegas spa employee was found dead last month in the chamber of a cryotherapy machine chilled by liquid nitrogen.
Cryotherapy involves entering the cold chamber and spending two to four minutes in temperatures ranging from minus-166 to minus-319 degrees Fahrenheit (minus-110 to minus-195 Celsius).
It is believed to have started in Japan in the 1970s to treat inflammatory conditions such as rheumatoid arthritis. It has been used by professional athletes on the premise that inflammation caused by exercise could also be treated by extreme cold and has made its way across the globe. It is primarily used in Eastern Europe.
Joseph Costello, a researcher with the University of Portsmouth in England who studies cryotherapy, said the entire rugby team of Wales traveled to Poland to use the technology in 2011. It hit the U.S. about two years ago and now, the NBA's Cleveland Cavaliers said the professional basketball team has its own cryotherapy chamber at its training center. The treatments are also available at some spas, sports medicine clinics and wellness centers.
Given that the lowest temperature ever recorded on Earth was minus-128 degrees Fahrenheit (minus-89 Celsius), experts say the health impacts of cryotherapy can't be predicted without more research. Costello urged that more studies should be done and noted that it may take a long time to fully understand the risks and possible benefits.
"Technology is moving at such a rapid pace, but it often takes time for scientific studies to be completed," he said.
The science and medical communities haven't embraced cryotherapy, and the U.S. Food and Drug Administration has not approved any whole-body cryogenic devices for medical use.
The FDA said in a statement it would regulate any device if a manufacturer makes medical claims such as reducing muscle soreness, shortening injury recovery time or increasing blood circulation, but not if the claims are non-medical and involve such things as comfort, soothing or relief.
Eric Rauscher, founder of Dallas-based distributor CryoUSA, said the company supports some form of regulation and specifically trains buyers of the machines not to make medical claims. Rauscher said he's even voided warranties after discovering customers advertising otherwise.
"We tell them 'let's not use words like treatment and procedures ' these are sessions. These aren't your patients, they are clients,'" Rauscher said. (kes)(+)
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Associated Press writers Juliet Williams in Sacramento and Kristen Wyatt in Denver contributed to this report.
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