centered image

centered image

Taking A Hot Bath Twice A Week Is 'BETTER Than Exercise' For Treating Depression

Discussion in 'Psychiatry' started by Dr.Scorpiowoman, Oct 23, 2018.

  1. Dr.Scorpiowoman

    Dr.Scorpiowoman Golden Member

    Joined:
    May 23, 2016
    Messages:
    9,028
    Likes Received:
    414
    Trophy Points:
    13,075
    Gender:
    Female
    Practicing medicine in:
    Egypt

    • Hot baths cut people's score on a depression test by twice as much as exercise
    • Warm water could fix the body clock which is disturbed in depressed people
    • In a study people were more likely to continue with bathing than working out
    [​IMG]

    Taking hot baths could be a better way of treating depression than exercising, a study has found.

    People who go to a spa for an hour twice a week show better improvements in their mental health than those who work out regularly.

    Experts suggest this could be because it restores the body's natural temperature rhythm over the course of a day, which can be disrupted in depressed patients.

    Regular bathing is faster-acting and easier than exercise, scientists said, and the study showed people are more likely to continue with it over the long term.

    [​IMG]

    In a study by Freiburg University in Germany people with depression were told to sit in a 40C (104F) bath for 30 minutes then relax with hot water bottles, and researchers found the effects were more profound than working out for the same amount of time

    Researchers from the University of Freiburg in Germany tested the effects of thermal baths on 45 people with depression.

    They said: 'Hyperthermic baths seems to be a fast-acting, safe and easy accessible method leading to clinically relevant improvement in depressive disorder after two weeks.

    'It is also suitable for persons who have problems performing exercise training.'

    The people in the study, who had an average age of 48, all had moderate to severe depression, which was measured on the commonly used HAM-D scale.

    A score of 19 or higher out of 50 indicates someone has severe depression – the average score among participants was 21.7.

    They were randomly assigned to either twice-weekly spa bathing, or two sessions of moderate exercise a week and their depression retested.

    People in the bathing group saw an average drop of six points within a fortnight, whereas exercise patients only shaved three points off their score.

    This suggests someone with severe depression could cut their symptoms to moderate depression by bathing, or somebody already on a moderate score could drop to mild.

    And whereas 13 out of 23 people dropped out of the exercise group, only two out of 22 refused to complete the hot bath treatments.

    All the bathers had to do was sit in a 40°C (104°F) bath for 30 minutes, then wrap themselves in blankets and hot water bottles for another 20 minutes.

    People in the exercise group had to do a moderate aerobic workout, such as running, dancing or swimming, for 40 to 45 minutes.

    Although the exact causes of depression are not certain, it is believed a disrupted circadian rhythm – or body clock – could be to blame, the New Scientist reports.

    The circadian rhythm is the physical and chemical changes the body goes through throughout the day.

    This includes the fluctuation of a person's body temperature which rises in the morning and falls during the night.

    In people with depression their body temperature may not regulate itself properly, and taking hot baths could help correct this – the baths in the study raised participants' body temperature by around 2°C (35.6°F).

    A psychiatrist from the Black Country Partnership NHS Foundation Trust, Nick Stafford, told the New Scientist: 'I’m not surprised they found a benefit, I’m just surprised no one has tried doing this before.'

    The National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) recommends people with moderate to severe depression should be treated with antidepressant medication as well as intense behavioural or interpersonal therapy.

    The research was published on the website bioRxiv.

    Source
     

    Add Reply

Share This Page

<