Researchers examined data on 1,628 adults who were 63 years old on
average, had no history of stroke and typically used a sauna one to
three times a week.
After following half of the participants for at least 15 years, the
study team found that 155 people had a stroke. Compared to people
who only used the sauna once a week, those who went four to seven
times a week were 61 percent less likely to have a stroke during the
study period, researchers report in Neurology.
"Since a majority of strokes can be attributed to elevated blood
pressure (hypertension), sauna use may reduce the risk of stroke via
reduction in blood pressure," said lead study author Setor Kunutsor
of the University of Bristol in the UK.
It's also possible that saunas might help reduce the risk of stroke
by lowering inflammation, reducing artery stiffness and resistance
to blood flow through the circulatory system, Kunutsor said by
email.
"Sauna is a safe activity and has a lot of beneficial health effects
in addition to its stress releasing and relaxation effects,"
Kunutsor said.
Adults who already have a regular sauna habit should take the
results as encouragement to keep it up, Kunutsor added.
People who are not familiar with the use of sauna are advised to
"begin with caution, test individual heat tolerance, and increase
the frequency and intensity of sauna use slowly," Kunutsor said.
"People who can undertake physical activity should not replace this
with sauna," Kunutsor added. "Ideally they should combine sauna with
physical activity."
[to top of second column] |
The results translate to a rate of 8.1 strokes per year among every
1,000 people who used the sauna once a week, compared to 7.4 strokes
per year for every 1,000 people who used the sauna two or three
times a week.
Among people who used the sauna at least four times a week, however,
just 2.8 out of every 1,000 per year had a stroke during the study.
The study wasn't a controlled experiment designed to prove whether
or how regular sauna use might help prevent strokes. Some people
also can't use a sauna, including individuals who have had a recent
heart attack or stroke or suffer from conditions like chest pain,
low blood pressure or acute infections.
Novices to sauna use should also proceed with caution because a
single episode might trigger heart problems, dehydration or
contribute to a stroke, especially if people fail to follow
recommendations against alcohol use, Dr. Josef Heckmann of the
Municipal Hospital Landshut in Germany notes in an accompanying
editorial.
"For those who are not familiar with sauna bathing, it is advised to
begin with caution, test individual heat tolerance, slowly increase
the frequency and intensity of bathing, and ideally combine bathing
with leisure physical activity," Heckmann and a coauthor write.
SOURCE: https://bit.ly/2wcPVJg and https://bit.ly/2FCMKdw Neurology,
online May 2, 2018.
[© 2018 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2018 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |