Tucson Citizen.com

Hydrotherapy: Ancient Wisdom for Modern Times

by on Jun. 15, 2012, under Natural Medicine Tips


Yes, it really is what it sounds like.  Hydro refers to water, and therapy… well, that’s fairly self-explanatory, I think.  Hydrotherapy is Nature Cure at its finest. But (first of all) what is it, and (second of all) how in the world can water actually have any sort of therapeutic value?

Hydrotherapy dates back to the 1800s, when a priest named Father Kneipp first began to use the properties of hot and cold water applications to heal.  There are really only two basic principles involved in all forms of hydrotherapy.

1) The first principle is that hot applications (of any kind, water included) cause vasodilation (they make your blood vessels expand), while cold applications cause your blood vessels to constrict. 

2) The second principle is that there are two responses of your body to any stimulus: the first, or primary action, and the secondary, lasting action.  Any living system is designed to maintain homeostasis, or balance, and so both actions are always necessary.  For instance, if you ice your injured shoulder, then the primary response is that the local blood vessels will constrict and decrease the flow of blood (and thus decrease inflammation).  But after awhile your body realizes that if it wants to prevent frostbite, it’d better send some blood to that shoulder, so the secondary response is an increased blood flow to the area.  The same happens with heat: the primary effect is vasodilation, but the secondary effect is decreased blood flow to the surface.

These principles can be applied in a variety of ways, depending on the condition.  My favorite technique is called constitutional hydrotherapy, and it involves a series of hot and cold towels to the torso, which creates a sort of “pumping” action, bringing blood to the internal organs and flushing it away quicker than would otherwise occur physiologically, which increases the flow of oxygen and nutrients and whisks away toxins faster as well.  Water is an especially good vehicle for this effect, because it has a high specific heat, which allows it to absorb and give off large quantities of heat.  There’s also an intangible result that naturopathic doctors tend to refer to as “increased vitality,” making constitutional hydrotherapy a terrific choice for chronic illness.

There are a number of other ways to use hydrotherapy, though, depending on your issue.  At times just a cold application (which is actually called a heating compress, because of its secondary action) is more appropriate.  At times tepid baths are most appropriate, such as in cases of insomnia or fever, to name a few.  Steam inhalation is considered hydrotherapy as well, and (as you might imagine) that’s terrific for upper respiratory problems.

Hydrotherapy is deceptively simple, but it works like a charm, and there are a number of treatments you can use right at home (and for free!) to treat common ailments.

Interested in more information?  For more specific information on specific conditions, check out my website!

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Dr Lauren Deville is board-certified to practice Naturopathic Medicine.  To receive her free e-book, “Ten Nutritional Supplements Everyone Should Have,” or to receive her monthly health and wellness newsletter, please sign up at www.drlaurendeville.com.  



  • Lydia Brewer

    Hello Lauren. Your blog is a refreshing addition to TC.com. A question from over here at Veteran Veritas… there are an inordinate number of women, who are wives of veterans experiencing PTSD, that have developed some serious brands of fibromyalgia. It seems to me this beyond coincidence and worthy of some research–maybe a graduate student thesis? What do you think of this idea? And what does your fund of knowledge say about Fibromyalgia?  Email “micpatrickbrewer@gmail.com”

  • Lydia Brewer

     Ooops that posted as my wife. But that is okay, cuz it is she who has the fibromyalgia. Mike

    • Lauren_Deville

      Hi Mike – I’m not surprised that stress for your wife might be associated with fibromyalgia.  I actually wrote an article on the connection between Chronic Fatigue and fibro here that you might find helpful.  Let me know if I can be of any further assistance!  http://www.drlaurendeville.com/articles/chronic-fatigue-and-fibromyalgia/