Balneotherapy -
Healing with Water
The first part of this excerpt is reprinted from Healing
Spriings, The Ultimate Guide to Taking the Waters, by Nathaniel
Altman.
One of the most important activities that takes place at a
traditional spa is balneotherapy, a natural approach to health and
healing that uses hot spring water, gases, mud, and climatic factors
(such as heat) as therapeutic elements.
Simple Solution: In addition to bathing, modalities such as
hydrotherapy, mud therapy, physical therapy, massage, steam baths,
physical exercises, inhalation of water vapor, and drinking mineral
water are often used as part of a complex therapy for both health
and preservation and treating disease.
Over the past four centuries, the science of balneology has evolved
into a medical specialty in Europe and Japan, where special courses
in balneotherapy are offered to both physicians and nurses by major
medical schools. Doctors believe that thermal springs facilitate
healing in a number of important ways.
Eight ways Balneotherapy Heals:
* Bathing in hot springs gradually increases the temperature of the
body, thus killing harmful germs and viruses.
* Thermal bathing increases hydrostatic pressure on the body, thus
increasing blood circulation and cell oxygenation. The increase in
blood flow also helps dissolve and eliminate toxins from the body.
* Hot springs bathing increases the flow of oxygen-rich blood
throughout the body, bringing improved nourishment to vital organs
and tissues.
* Bathing in thermal water increases body metabolism, including
stimulating the secretions of the intestinal tract and the liver,
aiding digestion.
* Repeated hot springs bathing (especially over 3- to 4- week
period) can help normalize the functions of the endocrine glands as
well as the functioning of the body's autonomic nervous system.
* Trace amounts of minerals such as carbon dioxide, sulfur, calcium,
magnesium, and lithium are absorbed by the body and provide healing
effects to various body organs and system. These healing effects can
include stimulation of the immune system, leading to enhanced
immunity; physical and mental relaxation; the production of
endorphins; and normalized gland function.
* Mineral springs contain high amounts of negative ions, which can
help promote feelings of physical and psychological well-being.
* The direct application of mineralized thermal waters (especially
those containing sulfur) can have a therapeutic effect on diseases
of the skin, including psoriasis, dermatitis, and fungal infections.
Some mineral waters are also used to help the healing of wounds and
other skin injuries.
Indications for Balneotherapy:
Over the several hundred years during which the science of medical
balneology has developed, physicians have been able to identify the
health conditions that can best be treated by healing springs. The
following list of indications for balneotherapy is based on the
research of Yuko Agishi, M.D.
CHRONIC DISEASES
Chronic rheumatic diseases
Functional recovery of central and peripheral neuroparalysis
Metabolic diseases, especially diabetes, obesity, and gout
Chronic gastrointestinal diseases
Chronic mild respiratory diseases
Circulatory diseases, especially moderate or mild hypertension
Peripheral circulatory diseases (affecting the hands and feet)
Chronic skin diseases
Psychosomatic and stress-related diseases
Autonomic nervous system dysfunction
Vibration disorder (a middle ear disorder affecting balance)
Sequela of (conditions resulting from) trauma
Chronic gynecological diseases
CONTRAINDICATIONS
If you have any illnesses or diseases, or are pregnant, consult with
your physician before using spa therapy.
CAUTIONS
Avoid soaking in a hot spring alone, and the elderly should
use with caution, don't use a spa if you are under the influence of
alcohol or drugs, especially heart medications, don't overheat,
drink plenty of cool water, and use private pools if you have a skin
disease.
This excerpt is from the Aromatherapy Companion by Victoria Edwards
Balneotherapy
Balneotherapy is the art of water therapy, and one of aromatherapy's
best friends. There is nothing quite so soothing and relaxing as a
leisurely soak in a hot bath. As the warmth of the water cradles
your physical body, providing relief from the constant pull of
gravity, your psyche is refreshed and restored, the weight of the
world momentarily lifted. Add a few drops of well-selected essential
oils and you approach nirvana.
Water is nature's greatest and most effective solvent. It acts as a
liquid suspension, carrying a variety of minerals and chemicals,
depending on its source. When we immerse our bodies in a warm bath,
our skin rapidly begins to absorb chemicals that are suspended in
the water. These chemical components can make their way to our
bloodstream in as little as 2 to 15 minutes. It will take a normally
healthy person from half an hour to three hours to eliminate most of
these chemicals through the expired breath and urine. In unhealthy
or obese people, this process may take up to 10 hours. That is why
adding essential oils to a bath is such an effective aromatherapy
treatment.
The premise of balneotherapy is built on this solvency. Just as we
absorb the essential oils we intentionally add to the water, we
absorb a variety of other chemicals and minerals suspended in our
water. No two waters are exactly the same. Spring waters, often
thought of as pure, actually contain a variety of minerals. It is
the presence of these minerals, from the depths of the earth, that
makes certain spring waters highly valued for their curative
properties.
The amazing virtues of water have been sung throughout the ages.
Ancient myths featured countless sea nymphs, mermaids, and water
goddesses. It's no wonder that most ancient gods and goddesses
associated with water were believed to be sources of life,
fertility, and fecundity. Water is our element. We most likely
evolved from aquatic creatures -- and in any event, our first months
of life were spent floating in an amniotic bath. In our dreams water
symbolizes the ebb and flow of our emotions. We use water for
cleansing, refreshing, and relaxing. Water is the basis for our
body's evaporative cooling system. It flushes out toxic wastes,
plumps up our cells, and lubricates our moving parts. Water is
crucial to our survival. Without it we would literally dry up and
blow away.
A Brief History of the Bath
Although the Romans may not have invented the bath, they raised
bathing to a high art. Roman citizens lingered for hours in communal
hot baths, where they socialized, conducted courtship, and even
sealed business deals. They built lavish baths wherever they found
natural hot springs. The remains of Roman baths are still evident
throughout Europe, the Mideast, and North Africa.
The Roman reverence for bathing has survived in Turkey, where
patrons still visit public baths to be soaped, steamed, and scrubbed
clean by attendants. Meanwhile, a highly ritualized bathing culture
has evolved in Japan as well. Whole towns exist as destination
resorts around Japanese natural hot springs. The harried Japanese
make annual visits to these springs, and in between find time for
frequent visits to the "Sento" -- the local communal hot-tub house.
Japanese homes are for the most part poorly heated, and the family
bath becomes an important source of warmth in winter.
With the fall of the Roman Empire, bathing fell out of favor in
Europe. For the next few centuries the practice was considered
suspect and unhealthy, immersion a frightening and distasteful
experience. Washing was an unpleasant and infrequent necessity, to
be carried out quickly and furtively, with a basin of cold water.
Water Therapy
Water therapy as practiced today was introduced in Austria in the
19th century by the Reverend Father Sebastian Kneipp. Father Kneipp
believed in the healing properties of water and prescribed
treatments that included drinking mineral waters, soaking in hot
springs, taking cold showers, and walking barefoot in the
early-morning dew. Healing spas that subscribed to Father Kneipp's
philosophy sprang up all over Europe, and "taking the waters" became
a popular social pastime for the rich and privileged.
Today health spas abound throughout the United States, Europe, and
the Mediterranean. Modern spas have evolved beyond mere
mineral-water treatments to offer many other complementary therapies
as well as physical fitness, relaxation training, and nutritional
counseling. Aromatherapy has been universally adopted as a valuable
synergistic component of most spa therapies.
You can create your own spa experience with just a few essential
oils and a tub of hot water. An aromatherapy bath is the ultimate
luxury. Experiment with 3 to 5 drops of several different,
complementary oils, adjusting the total amount to suit your
individual taste. You can add the oils directly to the bath or, for
added luxury, disperse them in a cup of milk first. Essential oils
combine well with all other bath additives. Add Epsom salts, sea
salts, and algae to mineralize the water and increase buoyancy. Add
oatmeal or honey to soothe and nourish the skin. Add bicarbonate of
soda to "soften" the water. Add fresh or dried herbs and flower
petals for their aesthetic and therapeutic qualities.