Cryotherapy can treat wellness and physiotherapy.
Overview of Cryotherapy.
Liquid nitrogen or argon gas is used in cryotherapy to freeze and kill aberrant tissue. Cryotherapy treats warts, skin tags, and prostate, cervical, and liver malignancies. Wellness and physiotherapy clinics offer cryotherapy for pain, rehabilitation, and cosmetic purposes.
Cryotherapy Definition
- Extreme cold is used to eliminate or treat abnormal tissue.
- Liquid nitrogen spray or cotton swab is used for cutaneous cryotherapy.
- A cryoprobe is placed through a tiny incision for internal cryotherapy.
- Cold freezes and kills cells; the immune system removes them.
Medical Uses
- Warts, skin tags, precancerous lesions, and early-stage malignancies.
- Treatment for prostate, cervical, hepatic, and retinoblastoma.
- Reduces inflammation, muscle soreness, and edema after sports.
- Post-surgery: Used to reduce knee replacement discomfort and swelling.
Benefits
- Less intrusive than surgery.
- Less pain and bleeding, and faster healing.
- Destroys skin lesions and cancers locally.
Risks, side effects
- Minor risks: Redness, blistering, scabbing, and minor discomfort.
- Nerve injury, scarring, infection, and uncommon bone fractures are serious dangers.
- Contraindications: Not for cold-aggravated conditions such as Raynaud's syndrome.
Why is cryotherapy used?
Doctors use cryotherapy to eliminate warts, precancerous skin lesions, and some malignancies, while athletes and wellness clinics utilize it to reduce inflammation, relieve pain, and hasten recovery. Dermatology and physiotherapy clinics offer cryotherapy for skin care, sports recovery, and cosmetic fat freezing.
Medical Uses
- Warts, skin tags, dark patches, precancerous lesions, and early-stage skin malignancies (basal cell and squamous cell carcinoma).
- Cancer treatment: Prostate, cervical, liver, bone, and pediatric retinoblastoma.
- Especially in the cervix and skin, precancerous cells prevent malignancy.
Sport and Recovery
- Sports recovery: Whole-body cryotherapy reduces muscle pain, edema, and tiredness.
- Ice packs and cold compresses for injuries, migraines, and post-surgery.
- Controls inflammation: Treats arthritis, tendinitis, and exercise-induced muscle injury.
Wellness & Cosmetics
- Support weight loss: Cold exposure may increase metabolism and cause fat to be burned.
- Increases circulation, eliminates fine wrinkles, and improves skin tone.
Is cryotherapy painful?
While not painful, cryotherapy can be unpleasant. When cold is applied, most people feel a strong stinging, burning, or tingling. Cryotherapy intensity depends on the location and type (localized freezing vs. whole-body chamber).
What You Might Feel
- Localised cryotherapy:
- A momentary stinging or burning sensation when liquid nitrogen hits the skin.
- Tingling or numbness when tissue freezes.
- Mild residual pain like a burn or blister.
Total-body cryotherapy:
- Extreme cold for 2–4 minutes.
- Shivering, tingling, or prickling.
- Most people tolerate it well since sessions are short.
Pain/Discomfort
- The discomfort normally lasts only a few minutes during and after freezing.
- Manageable: Doctors promise patients that tiny skin lesions can be treated without an anaesthetic.
- Following treatment, treated regions may blister, scab, or ache for a few days, but the pain is usually moderate.
Risks of Pain
- Sensitive areas: Treatments on the face, genitals, or inside the body can be more painful and may require anaesthesia.
- Nerve problems and inadequate circulation can worsen pain and consequences.
Who should avoid cryo?
People with serious cardiovascular illness, uncontrolled high blood pressure, cold intolerance diseases (such as Raynaud's or cold urticaria), severe infections, pregnancy, and immunological or neurological conditions should avoid cryotherapy.
Major contraindications
- Cardiovascular disease:
- Arrhythmias, unstable angina, ischemic heart disease, and recent heart attack.
- Uncontrolled severe hypertension (BP > 180/100).
- Cardiac pacemaker or stents were placed in the last 6 months.
Disorders of circulation:
- Vascular disease, thrombosis, and severe anemia.
- Raynaud's phenomenon (cold-induced finger/toe vasospasm).
Cold intolerance:
- Cold-induced urticaria.
- Cold hemoglobinuria, cryofibrinogenemia, cryoglobulinemia.
Neurological issues:
- Epilepsy or seizures uncontrolled.
- Neuropathy (reduced sensation increases frostbite risk).
Respiratory disease:
- COPD, acute respiratory infections, and serious lung diseases.
Skin and infection issues:
- Ulcers, cellulitis, erysipelas, and open wounds.
- The treatment area has a history of severe frostbite.
Blood and immune disorders:
- Multiple myeloma, immunosuppression, and absence of platelets.
- Active systemic infections.
Pregnancy:
- Whole-body cryotherapy is contraindicated; localised use is allowed under medical care.
Some more factors:
- Cryochamber Claustrophobia.
- Extreme mental instability.
- Under 18 without parental consent.
- Use of alcohol or drugs before therapy.
Risks of Ignoring
- Uncontrolled hypertension crisis.
- Tissue necrosis in Raynaud's or frostbite patients.
- The induction of epileptic seizures.
- Infection spreads after cryotherapy on open wounds.
What are the cryotherapy side effects?
Cryotherapy side effects vary by type; however, they are usually moderate and short-lived.
Typical Side Effects
- Treatment-site redness: Temporary discomfort or edema.
- Small blisters may occur after freezing skin lesions.
- Scabbing: Treated tissue scabs or falls off within days.
- Numbness or tingling: Cold can temporarily irritate nerves.
- Mild pain: Stinging or burning during and after treatment.
Less Common but Possible
- Scarring: Rare but possible with deeper tissue.
- Darker skin tones may develop light or dark patches.
- Application near hair follicles causes hair loss.
- Frostbite is rare but possible with incorrect whole-body cryotherapy.
Rare Serious Risks
- Freezing near major nerves damages them.
- Blisters or wounds that are neglected might cause infection.
- Repeated whole-body cryotherapy causes rare bone fractures.
Recovery Notes
- Most adverse effects resolve in days to weeks.
- Doctors advise keeping treated areas clean and dry.
- Whole-body cryotherapy is short (2–4 minutes) to reduce dangers.
Benefits of cryotherapy?
Cryotherapy treats skin lesions and malignancies and improves mood, recuperation, and inflammation. Skin care clinics and physiotherapy institutions provide it for sports recovery and cosmetic fat freezing.
Health Benefits
- Removes warts, skin tags, seborrheic keratosis, and precancerous lesions.
- Used to treat prostate, cervical, liver, bone, and retinoblastoma.
- Carotid artery cooling reduces migraine pain.
- Whole-body cryotherapy reduces arthritis pain and improves mobility.
Sport and Recovery Benefits
- Reduces pain and speeds recovery after strenuous workouts.
- Cold lowers inflammation and improves circulation.
- Pinched nerves or neuromas can be numbed by cold.
Mental Health Benefits
- Mood improvement: Cold exposure releases endorphins, adrenaline, and noradrenaline, which may relieve anxiety and sadness.
- Rejuvenating skin improves circulation, tone, and fine wrinkles.
- Cooling may burn calories from brown fat.
Risks and Limits
- Redness, blistering, scabbing, and slight pain are temporary.
- Rare risks: Nerve injury, scarring, frostbite, and infection.
- Not FDA-approved for whole-body cryotherapy: Limited but encouraging evidence requires more research.
Conclusion:
Cryotherapy uses intense cold for medical and health objectives.
Cryotherapy has many benefits but also risks, such as redness, burning, and uncommon nerve injury. Avoid it if you have cardiovascular illness, cold intolerance, or pregnancy.
Before commencing cryotherapy, visit a doctor. Cryotherapy is safe and effective when performed under professional supervision.








