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The immersion bathtub should be filled with about 135 litres of hot water at 40ºC. One to 1 1/2  kg of Epsom salt should be dissolved in this water. The patient should drink a glass of cold  water, cover the head with a cold towel and then lie down in the tub, complete

Monday, 12 November 2012

A hot hipbath helps to relieve painful menstruation, pain in the pelvic organs, painful urination, inflamed rectum or bladder and painful piles.


It also benefits enlarged prostate gland, painful contractions or spasm of the bladder, sciatica, neuralgia of the ovaries and bladder. 

This bath is generally taken for eight to 10 minutes at a water temperature of 40º C to 45ºC. The  bath should start at 40º C. The temperature should be gradually increased to 45 º C. NO friction  should be applied to the abdomen. Before entering the tub, the patient should drink one glass of  cold water. A cold compress should be placed on the head. A cold shower bath should be taken  immediately after the hot hipbath.  

Care should be taken to prevent the patient from catching a chill after the bath. The bath should  be terminated if the patient feels giddy or complains of excessive pain.  

A simple nature cure is the hot footbath.


In this method, the patient should keep his or her legs in a tub or bucket filled with hot water at a  temperature of 40ºC to 45ºC. Before taking this bath, a glass of water should be taken and the  body should be covered with a blanket so that no heat or vapour escapes from the footbath.  The head should be protected with a cold compress. The duration of the bath is generally from 5  to 20 minutes. The patient should take a cold shower immediately after the bath.  

The hot footbath stimulates the involuntary muscles of the uterus, intestines, bladder and other  pelvic and abdominal organs. It also relieves sprains and ankle joint pains, headaches caused  by cerebral congestion, and colds. In women, it helps restore menstruation, if suspended, by  increasing supply of blood especially to the uterus and ovaries.  

The Epsom salt bath is useful in cases of sciatica, lumbago, rheumatism, diabetes, neuritis, cold and catarrh, kidney disorders and other uric acid and skin affections.


The immersion bathtub should be filled with about 135 litres of hot water at 40ºC. One to 1 1/2  kg of Epsom salt should be dissolved in this water. The patient should drink a glass of cold  water, cover the head with a cold towel and then lie down in the tub, completely immersing the  trunk, thighs and legs for 15 to 20 minutes. The best time to take this bath is just before retiring  to bed.  

The cold hipbath is a routine treatment in most diseases.


The water temperature should be 10ºC to 18ºC. The duration of the bath is usually 10 minutes,  but in pecific conditions it may vary from one minute to 30 minutes. If the patient feels cold or is  very weak, a hot foot immersion should be given with the cold hipbath.  

The patient should rub the abdomen briskly from the navel downwards and across the body with  a moderately coarse wet cloth. The legs, feet and upper part of the body should remain  completely dry during and after the bath. The patient should undertake moderate exercise like  yogasanas in a warm room, after the cold hipbath, to warm the body.  

A cold hipbath is a versatile therapy. It relieves constipation, indigestion, and Obesity, and helps the eliminative organs to function properly. It is also helpful in uterine  problems like irregular menstruation, chronic uterine infections, pelvic inflammation, piles,  hepatic congestion, chronic congestion of the prostate gland, seminal weakness, impotency,  sterility, uterine and ovarian displacements, dilation of the stomach and colon, diarrhoea,  dysentery, haemorrhage of the bladder and so on. The cold hipbath should not be employed in  acute inflammations of the pelvic and abdominal organs, ovaries and in painful contractions of  the bladder, rectum, or vagina.  

A simple nature cure for inflammatory conditions is the cold footbath.


Three to four inches of cold water at a temperature of 7.2 ºC to 12.7º C should be placed in a  small tub or bucket. The feet should be completely immersed in the water for one to five  minutes. Friction should be continuously applied to the feet during the bath, either by an  attendant or by the patient by rubbing one foot against the other.

A cold footbath, taken for one or two minutes, relieves cerebral congestion and uterine haemorrhage. It also helps in the treatment of sprains, strains and inflamed bunions when taken for longer periods. It should not be taken in cases of inflammatory conditions of the genitourinary organs, liver and kidneys.

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