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Footbaths: effective against cold feet, migraines and insomnia

Mareike Steger
19.6.2023
Translation: Jessica Johnson-Ferguson

What’s the fastest mini spa in the world? A bucket of warm or cold water. Footbaths aren’t just beneficial for your feet – they have a positive effect on your whole body.

Footbaths: how do they affect our body?

Essentially, hydrotherapy is physics. Water’s a heat conductor, so it transfers its temperature to your body. As temperature stimuli don’t remain in one spot, they stimulate your entire body – your immune system, circulation, nervous system and metabolism. So when you dip your feet in a footbath, this will trigger a reaction in the temperature sensors of your skin. The heat or cold stimulus interferes with your body’s temperature and your body will react.

What happens then is described as follows on the website of the Austrian Kneipp Association:

As a result, a warm footbath dilates the vessels, stimulates circulation in the legs and the abdominal and pelvic organs and lowers blood pressure. In addition, the warm water has a calming effect on the autonomic nervous system.

A cold footbath, on the other hand, constricts the vessels. This briefly translates into increased blood pressure. Next, the vessels dilate again as the body’s own temperature regulation increases blood flow to the cold area. This lowers blood pressure.

Kneipp therapy: studies prove the effect of hydrotherapy

Speaking of sleep: in 1990, a team led by Kurt Kräuchi of Basel University Hospital proved that cold feet make it harder to fall asleep. According to his study published in Nature, the average time it takes to fall asleep when your feet are warm is ten minutes; subjects with cold feet took 25 minutes.

Why is that? Prof. Michalsen explains this phenomenon as follows in his book, «The tremendous time difference is due to the difference in blood flow between the smaller blood vessels, which supply our tissues, and the peripheral vessels, which influence the cascades of messenger substances that lull us to sleep.»

Soaking your feet in warm water before going to bed (or taking a hot water bottle to bed with you) is a hot tip if you struggle to fall asleep.

Footbaths: alternating temperatures train your immune system

In Kneipp hydrotherapy, alternating hot and cold showers are used in addition to cold and warm footbaths. Professor Michalsen says alternating hot and cold water is more effective than just warm water when it comes to «general health benefits and strengthening your immune system.»

Application: which type of footbath for which ailments?

Please note: if you have pre-existing conditions, such as high blood pressure, vein problems, varicose veins or heart disease, please refrain from experimenting with footbaths. Get the green light from your doctor first. Footbaths may even have an adverse effect on these types of conditions.

However, if you’re healthy, anything goes. For example, if you’ve been hiking, a warm footbath can feel relaxing or a cold one invigorating on a cool day.

When are footbaths recommended?

Footbath to help you fall asleep: add mustard powder or ginger

Footbaths against sweaty feet: add baking soda, sage or bark

If you get sweaty feet, warm footbaths can be really helpful. Brew together willow, oak bark or sage leaves previously steeped in boiling water. While sage needs to sit for just a few minutes, bark needs several hours. Baking soda also has a sweat-reducing effect. Simply add two to three teaspoons of baking soda to your footbath.

Footbaths if you’re coming down with a cold or migraine: add herbal extracts or mustard powder

Footbath to sooth swollen legs: add apple cider vinegar or herbs

Extracts of mugwort herb, lemon balm, camomile, peppermint or thyme enhance the circulation-promoting effect. Or add 150 millilitres of apple cider vinegar to 5 litres of cold water – the vinegar will revitalise your tired feet.

Whether you opt for a cold or warm bath or one with rising heat, you must always keep your feet warm after the treatment. Also make sure to rest your feet for a while after the bath to allow the hydrotherapy to take full effect.

Header image: Shutterstock

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Mareike Steger
Autorin von customize mediahouse
oliver.fischer@digitecgalaxus.ch

I could've become a teacher, but I prefer learning to teaching. Now I learn something new with every article I write. Especially in the field of health and psychology.


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