While we shiver through winter down here in the southern hemisphere, Lindsay Lohan has been willingly submitting her body to sub-zero temperatures… wearing nothing but swimmers, gloves and a headband.
On Instagram yesterday, the Mean Girls star was pictured “crying laughing” as she emerged from an ice lab in New York. She’s not alone in this behaviour — back in February, actress Mandy Moore shared snaps of her own chilly experience.
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It sounds like just another kooky celebrity hobby, but it’s the modern form of a medical treatment that’s been around since the 17th century. Known as whole-body cryotherapy, it involves standing in a chamber filled with freezing, dry nitrogen gas chilled as low as -170 degrees Celsius, with only your extremities sufficiently covered.
The therapy lasts just three or four minutes, because any longer than that would put you in a bit of trouble. Initially, cryotherapy was used in medieval Europe to treat inflammation diseases like rheumatoid arthritis; it’s still used for medical purposes.
We’re not sure exactly why Lohan and Moore chose to have cryotherapy, but it’s been linked to number of general health, beauty and even mental benefits. (Post continues after gallery.)
Celebrities having cryotherapy
According to Inc. cryotherapists claim the extreme temperature switches on the body’s “fight or flight” survival response, causing it to direct blood flow to the vital organs and pump the bloodstream with oxygen and nutrients.
This is said to have positive effects on the body: a reduction in muscle soreness, inflammation of the joints and fatigue; growth of healthy skin cells; and the production of mood-boosting endorphins, which help to combat stress and improve energy.
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