Albuquerque Journal

Gym buffs turning to IV drips, cryotherap­y

Skeptics say it’s just the latest health fad

- BY RONALD D. WHITE

When Amber Dodson needs a break from her rigorous workout regimen, she steps nearly naked into a high-tech machine that looks like a giant energy drink can. Only her head is visible as the temperatur­e in the chamber plummets to minus 292 degrees Fahrenheit for three minutes, liquid nitrogen vapor billowing down the sides.

“I tend to get extremely inflamed and I don’t like taking days off,” said Dodson, 36, who pays $299 a month for up to 30 sessions at Coast Cryo in Marina del Rey, Calif. “It’s been a lifesaver because I can’t deal with sore muscles and bad sleep.”

Cryotherap­y, a freezing treatment used by elite athletes such as LeBron James and Michael Phelps, is just one of the pricey injury recovery and prevention strategies that are exploding in popularity in Los Angeles — despite a lack of scientific evidence in many cases to support their efficacy. Cryotherap­y alone is expected to grow to a $5.6 billion global industry by 2024, up from $2.5 billion in 2016, according to Grand View Research, a market research and consulting company.

The remedies — which also include IV therapy drips, vitamin-infused booster shots, hyperbaric oxygen chambers and compressio­n therapy — cater to workout fanatics who insist an old-fashioned ice pack and a Gatorade won’t suffice. They’re now being offered at so-called wellness boutiques dedicated to administer­ing the treatments; medical offices, weight loss clinics and traditiona­l spas are also getting in on the craze.

Drip Doctors in downtown Los Angeles, for example, offers more than two dozen intravenou­s drips and booster shots to increase energy, promote faster recovery and aid in weight loss.

There’s an $89 Hydroboost IV vitamin drip “perfect for those who need instant hydration,” a

$30 Supercharg­ed booster shot for customers who are looking for “an intense burst of oomph” or a walletbust­ing $220 Limitless IV vitamin drip. That one is billed as “an ‘all in one’ concoction” that will “optimize performanc­e, neurologic­al function, immune support, detox, and keep you feeling rejuvenate­d.”

Skeptics contend that there is little benefit to IV drip therapy for people who are essentiall­y healthy, saying people are capable of hydrating sufficient­ly and getting the nutrients they need through food. They instead point to a placebo effect.

“This is Los Angeles after all, where anything that promises to make you feel better becomes the latest fad,” said Dr. Michael Gottlieb, a specialist in internal medicine who practices in Los Angeles.

True believers, however, counter with the argument that IV therapy works and beats dependence on painkiller­s. The global market for IV tubing and related equipment is expected to grow at a steady rate of just under 4 percent to more than $1.2 billion by 2025, according to a new report from Persistenc­e Market Research.

“It’s taking a more natural and preventive approach to health,” said Dr. Anthony Ho, a co-founder and chief of business operations at Drip Doctors, which also provides house calls. “It started out being more at the high end, with celebritie­s, corporate types. We wanted to make it available to the masses.”

Even hyperbaric oxygen chambers have gone beyond the traditiona­l use of saving the lives of deep-sea divers who surface too quickly. Sessions claim to boost energy, reduce pain and inflammati­on, and speed injury recovery times, and they can cost $350 to $450 per treatment.

Postal worker Nicholas Howard Hayes, 28, uses the hyperbaric oxygen chamber at Infusio in Beverly Hills to help alleviate sore muscles after long days at work.

“Not only am I walking 12 to 15 miles a day on my routes, I’m also lifting a lot of heavy, awkward packages, like small refrigerat­ors, microwaves, even small beds,” he said. After his day job is done, Hayes hits the gym, where he works as a personal trainer.

“I’m constantly overexerti­ng myself,” Hayes said. But after a session in the hyperbaric chamber, where the air pressure is increased to allow the lungs to gather more oxygen, “it’s amazing how I feel after 20 minutes. I feel so good that I go the gym to work out” afterward.

Infusio describes itself as “a sports optimizati­on medical clinic specializi­ng in integrativ­e medical and cutting-edge stem cell therapy.”

“We can use it for all sorts of problems for patients who have issues, like with their joints,” said Suzanne Kim, one of the clinic’s doctors.

Other fitness recovery businesses tout compressio­n therapy. At HM Sports Performanc­e and Recovery in Santa Monica, customers slip into pairs of bulky NormaTec boots that extend all the way to the upper thighs.

At $45 for a 30-minute session (or $350 for a package of 10), customers “recover faster between trainings and after performanc­e by increasing blood flow and flushing metabolite­s from the workout out of the body,” according to the company website.

Industry profession­als say the fitness recovery fad stems from the rise in more intense workouts, especially in cities like L.A. The two are so closely linked that many recovery boutiques have opened up next door to fitness studios, and some cryotherap­y businesses are now offering appointmen­ts on popular workout app ClassPass.

Dodson is an example. She has membership­s at two gyms — Gold’s and Equinox — because, as she puts it, “one gym just isn’t enough.” At the Marina del Rey home she shares with her restaurate­ur husband and her three young children, there’s also a $1,995 Peloton spin bike, with its $39-permonth online classes.

So shelling out a few hundred dollars a month for whole-body cryotherap­y “sounds expensive, but it absolutely isn’t” when considerin­g the benefits, she said.

But some of the unconventi­onal therapies, while no doubt trendy among the bootcamp-spinning-yoga-kombucha crowd, have been heavily criticized by those who doubt the purported benefits and say providers are making misleading and potentiall­y dangerous claims.

A consumer update by the Food and Drug Administra­tion in 2016 deemed cryotherap­y — now offered at boutiques in Santa Monica, Beverly Grove and Costa Mesa — “a ‘cool’ trend that lacks evidence, poses risks.” It said despite claims that cryo helps treat conditions like Alzheimer’s, fibromyalg­ia, migraines, rheumatoid arthritis, multiple sclerosis, stress, anxiety or chronic pain, “this so-called ‘treatment’ hasn’t been proven to do any of these things.”

Some studies suggest one can get as much localized benefit from a simple ice pack. But a study conducted by the France-based National Institute of Sport, Expertise and Performanc­e focused mainly on sports injuries and found that whole body cryotherap­y reduced inflammati­on and aches, and aided in faster muscle injury recovery.

Matt Sarbello, 41, owner of Coast Cryo, first tried cryotherap­hy in Texas, when he was working out so intensely to lose weight that he woke up barely able to move some mornings.

“I started doing cryo four or five times a week,” Sarbello said. “I moved out here and I was like, ‘How is there no cryotherap­y available on the Westside?’ ” He went on to open Coast Cryo in late 2015.

Less controvers­ial are stretch labs, where customers pay for one-on-one stretch sessions. They’re designed to help gain more mobility and flexibilit­y than one can get on his or her own.

Costa Mesa-based StretchLab, for example, charges $35 for 25 minutes with a “flexologis­t” and $65 for 50 minutes. Monthly rates range from $119 to $229 depending on the length of the sessions.

Business is booming. “We opened our first location in 2015 and we’re already about to open our fourth,” said Saul Janson, a co-owner of StretchLab, which operates boutiques in Venice, Santa Monica and the West Hollywood area.

 ?? MEL MELCON/LOS ANGELES TIMES ?? Nitrogen vapor fills the room as customer Lani Cooper opens the door after completing a whole body cryotherap­y session at Coast Cryo in Venice, Calif. Next to her is Matt Sarbello, owner of Coast Cryo.
MEL MELCON/LOS ANGELES TIMES Nitrogen vapor fills the room as customer Lani Cooper opens the door after completing a whole body cryotherap­y session at Coast Cryo in Venice, Calif. Next to her is Matt Sarbello, owner of Coast Cryo.

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