NanoVi is highly complementary to Cryotherapy. Cryo shocks cells into action, then NanoVi orchestrates protein activities for better cellular function.

In this article, you’ll learn about cryo treatments, cold shock proteins, and NanoVi, and how to use them all together to improve your performance.Have you ever felt especially alert after taking a cold shower or jumping into a pool?

There’s a reason low temperatures clear your head. Cold exposure shocks your body into a state of higher performance – your cells reduce inflammation and improve your brain function.

Cold makes you more resilient, too. After a cold plunge, your cells adapt to stress better; they take on less damage, and when damage does happen, they repair it more quickly.

Inflammation, brain function, resiliency, and recovery: with all that benefit from a little cold exposure, it’s no surprise that cryotherapy – intentionally exposing yourself to extreme cold – is becoming ever more popular.

And with NanoVi, you can make cryotherapy even better. Many of cryotherapy’s benefits derive from cold shock proteins, proteins in your cells that activate in response to a sudden drop in temperature. Cold shock proteins are where NanoVi comes in:

That means you can use cryotherapy to activate cold shock proteins, and NanoVi to enhance their function and keep them active longer. Together, cryo and NanoVi are a potent combination for decreasing inflammation, improving brain function, making your cells more resilient, and recovering faster.

Cold shock proteins: the secret to cryotherapy

From an evolutionary perspective, it makes sense that you’d have to adapt to heat and cold to survive. Human haven’t always had A/C and central heating.

Extreme temperatures are a shock to your biology, and it responds by improving your ability to survive. For cold, you have cold shock proteins: performance-enhancing proteins that your cells create in response to a drop in body temperature (side note: your body makes heat shock proteins too, and they also have some pretty powerful benefits…but that’s for another article).

Cold shock proteins are still a pretty new field. There seem to be quite a few of them, each with specific benefits. The two best studied ones are:

Together, RBM3 and CIRP improve several parts of your biology, including:

And cold shock proteins aside, cryotherapy can also help you lose weight. Cold exposure increases your brown adipose tissue, a type of beneficial fat that you produce to keep your organs warm in response to cold [14]. Brown adipose tissue is very metabolically active; having more of it speeds up your fat metabolism and keeps you leaner [15].

NanoVi® enhances cold shock proteins and cryotherapy

Proteins are large, intricate molecules, and in order to be stable enough to function, they have to fold into complex structures (a process called protein folding). Unfolded proteins turn off; folded proteins turn on.

Oxidative stress can cause proteins to unfold and turn off, robbing the proteins of their ability to function. And because oxidative stress is always happening, you inevitably have a lot of proteins in your cells that aren’t working at their best.

NanoVi helps restore the proteins’ ability to fold, even in the face of oxidative stress, meaning proteins become more effective and can stay active for longer (here’s an in-depth explanation of how NanoVi works).

In the context of cryotherapy, NanoVi can support cold shock proteins, enhancing their ability to give you all the extraordinary benefits you read about a moment ago. With NanoVi, cold shock proteins can stay activated longer and do more in that time.

How to combine NanoVi® and cold therapy

You have a few options when it comes to whole body cryo treatments. Some of the most popular include:

In mice, a single session of cold exposure boosted cold shock protein activity for 3 days [18]. Doing cold exposure once a week for two weeks boosted cold shock proteins much longer – both for those two weeks and for another 6 weeks after that.

So, it seems that frequent cold exposure is a good way to keep your cold shock proteins active. Pair cryo with a NanoVi session to support your newly-activated cold shock proteins and enhance cryotherapy’s benefits even more.

Ready to make cryotherapy even more powerful? Find a NanoVi unit near you, ask your favorite cryo center if they have one yet or buy your own personal NanoVi unit. Remember to stay cool – your cells will thank you.

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References

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7. Zhu, X., Zelmer, A., Kapfhammer, J. P., & Wellmann, S. (2015). Cold-inducible RBM3 inhibits PERK phosphorylation through cooperation with NF90 to protect cells from endoplasmic reticulum stress. The FASEB Journal, 30(2), 624-634.

8. Ferry, A. L., Vanderklish, P. W., & Dupont-Versteegden, E. E. (2011). Enhanced survival of skeletal muscle myoblasts in response to overexpression of cold shock protein RBM3. American Journal of Physiology-Cell Physiology, 301(2), C392-C402.

9. Liu, J., Xue, J., Zhang, H., Li, S., Liu, Y., Xu, D., … & Diao, J. (2015). Cloning, expression, and purification of cold inducible RNA-binding protein and its neuroprotective mechanism of action. Brain research, 1597, 189-195.

10. Li, S., Zhang, Z., Xue, J., Liu, A., & Zhang, H. (2012). Cold-inducible RNA binding protein inhibits H2O2-induced apoptosis in rat cortical neurons. Brain research, 1441, 47-52.

11. Peake, J. M., Roberts, L. A., Figueiredo, V. C., Egner, I., Krog, S., Aas, S. N., … & Raastad, T. (2017). The effects of cold water immersion and active recovery on inflammation and cell stress responses in human skeletal muscle after resistance exercise. The Journal of physiology, 595(3), 695-711.

12. Dupont-Versteegden, E. E., Nagarajan, R., Beggs, M. L., Bearden, E. D., Simpson, P. M., & Peterson, C. A. (2008). Identification of cold-shock protein RBM3 as a possible regulator of skeletal muscle size through expression profiling. American Journal of Physiology-Regulatory, Integrative and Comparative Physiology, 295(4), R1263-R1273.

13. Yang, R., Zhan, M., Nalabothula, N. R., Yang, Q., Indig, F. E., & Carrier, F. (2010). Functional significance for an heterogeneous Ribonucleoprotein A18 (hnRNP A18) signature RNA motif in the 3 [prime] UTR of ataxia telangiectasia mutated and Rad3 related (ATR) transcript. Journal of Biological Chemistry, jbc-M109.

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Hans Eng admires Dave Asprey’s cryo sauna at Dave’s Bulletproof Lab on Vancouver Island

Stephanie Saladino’s inviting set-up at Katy Trails Cryo in Dallas
Christian Kammermayer, owner of Cryotherapy Miami
A happy cryo client at Glacé Cryotherapy Chattanooga
In the “chill zone” at Chill Zone Cryo in Cincinnati
LA filmmaker and Jiujitsu Master Victor Muh at Aurora Cryospa, Monrovia CA
Cerulean in Scottsdale pioneered the combined use of NanoVi and Cryo and have 100’s of great results
Chill thrill seeking in Huntington Beach at Surf City Cryo
NanoVi and cryo for the best possible recovery at Hyperbaric Therapy of Dublin
Enjoying the NanoVi at Glacé Cryotherapy Chattanooga
Relaxing post-cryo with NanoVi at Cryotherapy Miami
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