1. Do it for yourself. Purify your body.
A great way to relax from a pressure and stress filled day, is to bathe in a sauna for 15 to 30 minutes. This will relax your mind, rejuvenate your soul, and melt away those aches and pains. Your sweat glands eliminate a surprising amount of harmful toxins, as well as traces of alcohol, nicotine and cholesterol flowing through your bloodstream. Click here for more information on a
saunas overall benefits.
2. Cardiovascular Improvement
Your body responds to the sauna’s dry heat by increasing blood circulation and perspiration, the same natural cooling mechanism used in exercise. A 10 minute sauna requires an elevated heart rate and cardiac output, and also metabolic rate, all contributing to cardiac fitness. Click here for more information on
cardiovascular conditioning.
3. A Healthy Glow and Resistance to Disease
Sauna bathing helps improve your skin tone by stimulating your epidermis, opening pores and increasing circulation near the skin’s surface. You gain that youthful, just-returned-from-vacation look. By increasing your circulation and oxygen flow — together with improving your overall level of wellness — the dry sauna heat helps your body strengthen its immune system required to fight colds, congestion and infection. Click here for more information on
blood circulation.
4. Take Off The Weight and Keep It Off
Studies show that a person can burn 300 - 400 calories during a 20 to 30 minute sauna. That’s the equivalent of aerobic exercise, such as jogging or rowing, for the same period. Click here for more information on
weight loss.
5. Post-Exercise Relaxation
Sauna bathing assures higher circulation and more oxygen delivered to aching muscles, helping loosen up tight muscles for greater relaxation and faster recuperation. Click here for more information on
pain relief.
6. Relief of Arthritic Pain
Just what the doctor ordered. A dry, warm climate is what doctors prefer for those patients suffering from arthritic or stiff, painful joints. Click here for more information on
Rheumatoid Arthritis.