In an episode of the comedy series “Ted Lasso”, one of the main characters, an English football star, sticks his head out of a dustbin full of melted ice cubes when he is depressed after a match.
Immersion in ice water has become a recognizable method among football teams and other athletes, which should promote recovery.
In recent years, the much more advanced technology with so-called cryo-chambers has begun to spread.
Formula 1 driver Lewis Hamiltonshows for example on Instagram how he stands and jumps and freezes in just his underwear together with his fitness trainer in a room with a temperature of 98.7 degrees minus.
According to Hamilton’s fitness trainer Angela Cullen can lead the treatment to a number of things, from preventing dementia to weight loss.
But it is difficult to research the effects of the cryo-chambers, where liquid nitrogen is often injected to cool the air. The same applies to ice baths, which also go under the term cryotherapy.
Tommy Lundberg, who researches physiology at Karolinska Institutet, points to several reasons for this. On the one hand, it is not possible to “blind” studies by hiding from the subjects the type of treatment they receive, which means that there may be an expectation effect in those who participate. It is also difficult to measure whether a sports performance has improved or not.
– If you take a football team, it is very difficult to say whether they have actually performed better on the football field, so you have to go on indirect factors.
There are also objective indicators which one can measure. If you look at the entirety of the studies that exist where blood markers for muscle injuries and exercise pain have been measured, there is probably a small positive effect there, says Tommy Lundberg.
– Then it is much more unclear and ambiguous in the research whether it affects the recovery of muscle function and strength. There are some such indications, but it is not very clear that this would be the case.
There is most evidence for the subjective experience of cooling down – you feel fitter and fresher.
There are also studies that point to the unwanted effects of cold treatment.