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The Ageless Adept…

Dry Sauna vs Hot Bath During a Fast: Pros & Cons

I’ve stayed away from dry saunas for the duration of the fast due to concerns about over-stressing the body. In my experience, the water-weight loss from a 30-min hot pink salt/magnesium bath is comparable to that of a 30min-1hr dry sauna. Are they both equivalent in terms of the strain on the body? Should I refrain from those as well? (bath temp = ~110F+)

Here is the clean, precise comparison you need.
Short answer: A very hot bath can strain the body similarly to a dry sauna — but not identically. Whether you should avoid it during a long fast depends on temperature, duration, your electrolyte status, and your stage in the fast.

Below is the accurate breakdown so you can decide safely.


Are hot baths equivalent to dry saunas in stress on a fasting body?

They do overlap—but are not the same.

Hot baths (especially 110°F+) and dry saunas both trigger:

  • increased heart rate

  • vasodilation (blood vessels open)

  • sweating & water loss

  • electrolyte loss

  • drop in blood pressure

  • increased detoxification (through circulation & lymph movement)

During a long fast (Day 9–10), these effects can be amplified because:

  • electrolytes are lower

  • blood pressure is lower

  • glycogen is gone

  • autonomic balance is shifted

  • detox pathways are already upregulated

  • the nervous system is more sensitive


🔍 Key Differences

🔥 1. Dry sauna = more cardiovascular strain

Dry heat pushes:

  • heart rate higher

  • core temperature higher

  • dehydration faster

  • electrolyte loss faster

Fasters have fainted in dry saunas.
You made the right call avoiding them.


🛁 2. Hot bath = less core temperature rise but more hydrostatic pressure

Because you’re immersed:

  • the water shifts blood into the chest

  • heart must pump harder

  • blood pressure dynamics change

  • heat is transferred more efficiently

  • sweating may be less obvious but internal heat load rises

110°F+ is considered “very hot” even for non-fasters.


⚠️ 3. Water weight loss ≠ equal stress

Yes, you may lose similar water weight from both.
But the strain profile is different:

Dry sauna → dehydration + heat stress

Hot bath → circulatory load + temperature load

You feel safer in a bath, but physiologically it can still be heavy.


❗ Should you avoid hot baths late in a long fast?

Here is the clean guidance, tailored to a fast of 9–10 days:

Avoid if:

  • dizziness, lightheadedness, or weak pulse recently

  • electrolyte depletion (trace minerals or sodium low)

  • your MRAN readings show “Water Shortage,” “Electrolyte Issues,” or “Low ATP”

  • you feel cold and are using heat to compensate (risk of overtaxing)

  • strong detox symptoms are present (e.g., headaches, metallic taste)

Safe-ish if:

  • bath temp kept at 103–105°F, not 110°F

  • duration 15–20 minutes, not 30+

  • electrolytes were taken earlier that day

  • you rehydrate afterward

  • you do NOT stand up quickly afterward

  • you sit on the edge for 1–2 minutes before standing

  • you are within 24 hours of refeeding (i.e., body will soon get minerals)


💡 Given where you are RIGHT NOW (Day 10, in the “super-healing zone”):

Do NOT use a 110°F bath tonight or tomorrow morning.

You are in a low-electrolyte, high-detox state, which makes heat stress risky.

If you want to enhance detox WITHOUT the risk:

Use a warm bath (~102–104°F)
for 10–15 minutes
with magnesium flakes only (no salt).

This gives:

  • mild vasodilation

  • increased circulation

  • relaxation

  • lymph movement

  • NO huge electrolyte drain

  • minimal cardiovascular strain

This is the safest version during the last 24 hours of your fast.


📌 After your first refeeding meal

Once you refeed with potassium/carb/sodium/mineral-rich foods (broth, coconut water, fruit), THEN:

You can resume:

  • hot baths

  • even sauna (20–30 min, divided into rounds with cooling breaks)

BUT only after minerals are restored
and MRAN stabilizes.


✨ Bottom Line for Your Fast (Day 10)

Heat Therapy During Fast First 24h of Refeed After Day 2 Refeed
Dry Sauna ❌ Avoid ❌ Avoid ✔️ OK (gentle, short rounds)
Hot Bath 110°F+ ❌ Avoid ❌ Avoid ✔️ OK (15–20 min)
Warm Bath 102–104°F ✔️ Safe ✔️ Safe ✔️ Safe
Magnesium-only Bath ✔️ Best option ✔️ Best option ✔️ Best option

A.I. Disclaimer

Please note that the AI-generated responses to my health-related questions are often slightly customized based on a special prompt that includes my stated preferences for natural remedies, vegan-friendly products and protocols, alternative therapies, Traditional Chinese Medicine, and my personal medical history.

I encourage you to begin your own dialogue with AI to tailor recommendations to your specific needs. —The Ageless Adept

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