MYNORTHWEST NEWS

Study: Are saunas the best way to rid your body of toxins?

Feb 8, 2012, 12:46 PM | Updated: Feb 9, 2012, 9:04 am

Jason Allen, a faculty researcher and naturaopathic doctor at Bastyr University in Kenmore, is recruiting participants for a study, funded by the National Institutes of Health, to understand how heat, in the form of sauna treatments, can help cleanse the body of poisons. (97.3 KIRO FM/Tim Haeck)

(97.3 KIRO FM/Tim Haeck)

Since ancient times, people have tried various ways to cleanse their body of poisons, something we now call detoxification. If you’re feeling congested, stressed or run down, it might be time for a little spring “cleansing.”

These days, “detox” generally refers to breaking an alcohol or drug addiction. But you can also choose from popular, but controversial detox diets, including a maple syrup and lemonade combination, the raw food only diet, the fruit flush three-day detox, and the green smoothie fasting and detox diet.

A local researcher is looking at another way to detox that involves heat.

“What I’m proposing is a little more aggressive protocol, it’s like spring cleaning,” said Jason Allen, a faculty researcher and naturaopathic doctor at Bastyr University in Kenmore. “Would we do it once a year? I don’t know.”

Allen is recruiting participants for a study, funded by the National Institutes of Health, to understand how heat, in the form of sauna treatments, can help cleanse the body of poisons.

“Products are out there that slowly degrade in the environment and accumulate in humans, particularly in fat. So in this study, we picked one chemical that’s detectable in 100 percent of the human population, in fact 100 percent of the mammalian population, and those are PCBs, polychlorinated biphenyls.

PCBs were largely banned in the 1970s, but can remain in the environment for decades.

Allen says we’re living in a chemical soup and claims there are more than 80,000 registered chemicals in widespread use in manufacturing.

“We can’t even test for them and so we have a system where we don’t use the precautionary principle. We allow industry to put chemicals on the market and assume they’re safe until we see the damage that’s being done,” said Allen. He uses the example of lead in gasoline.

Allen is interested in the link between environmental poisons and disease. “For every major, chronic, degenerative disease that Americans are suffering from at epidemic levels, be it pain, cardio-vascular disease, cancer, infertility, diabetes, autism, there are strong associations with environmental chemicals,” said Allen. “And don’t misquote me here, I’m not saying they’re causative, (that) if you take this out, you’ll cure all these conditions.”

Allen concedes detoxification is not for everybody. He says the impact of chemicals on your body is part hereditary, part environmental.

“The former director of the E.P.A. said that the genes load the gun, but the environment pulls the trigger and the environment is the blueberries you do or don’t put on your oatmeal in the morning, as opposed to bacon, or the once-a-year sauna-based detox.”

You can use exercise, diet, nutrients, statins, and fiber to rid the body of fat that stores chemicals. But Allen says there’s a lack of scientific data on his main question: “Is there an effective way we can assist the body in removing toxins in a safe manner?”

MyNorthwest News

Photo: Citizens march in Seattle to commemorate MLK Day....

James Lynch

Marches held throughout Western Washington to commemorate MLK Day

On this Martin Luther King Jr. holiday, rallies and marches were held all over Western Washington.

6 hours ago

Photo: A crash blocked traffic north of Arlington....

Julia Dallas

2 I-5 north lanes reopen near Arlington after deadly crash

Traffic was heavy on Interstate 5 (I-5) north, near State Route (SR) 532, north of Arlington after a crash.

8 hours ago

Image: This screenshot captures the MyNorthwest earthquake tracker during the afternoon of Monday, ...

Steve Coogan

3.5 magnitude earthquake recorded near Snoqualmie

The U.S. Geological Survey confirmed a magnitude 3.5 earthquake hit Western Washington near Snoqualmie Monday afternoon.

10 hours ago

Photo: A marcher holds up a sign at a march and rally at the South Carolina Statehouse to honor Mar...

MyNorthwest Staff with Wire Reports

How do we talk about race? UW professor joins KIRO Newsradio amid MLK Day

"Seattle's Morning News" hosted Dr. Ralina Joseph, a professor at the University of Washington, on MLK Day to discuss how we talk about race.

13 hours ago

guns airports...

Frank Sumrall

Record-setting amount of guns confiscated from Washington airports in 2024

TSA officers working in Washington airports revealed they have collectively confiscated more guns in 2024 than ever before.

13 hours ago

costco strike...

Frank Sumrall

18,000 Costco teamsters to strike if no deal reached by Jan. 31

Thousands of Costco workers could strike by February after negotiations for an updated bargaining contract continue to strain.

14 hours ago

Study: Are saunas the best way to rid your body of toxins?