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Cold Therapy (Cryotherapy)

Controlled cold exposure used for short-term pain relief and swelling management in selected contexts.

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Key facts

  • Modality: Cold therapy (cryotherapy)
  • Primary effects: short-term pain numbing, swelling support, reduced local blood flow
  • Common contexts: new injuries with swelling, acute flare-ups, post-activity soreness for some people
  • Common forms: cold packs, cooling wraps, cold water exposure, clinical cryotherapy
  • Poor fit: impaired sensation, circulation disorders, cold hypersensitivity conditions
  • Decision support: Heat vs Cold Therapy

How cold therapy works

Local physiological response

Cooling tissues is associated with vasoconstriction (reduced local blood flow) and slower nerve conduction. In practice, this combination is commonly used for temporary pain numbing and swelling support.

System-level response

Whole-body cold exposure can trigger a sympathetic alerting response (for example, faster breathing and a temporary rise in heart rate). Some studies report changes in stress-related hormones after cold exposure, and responses vary based on protocol and health status.

Inflammation context

Cold therapy is often discussed in the context of inflammation because it can reduce local blood flow and swelling. At the same time, inflammation is part of tissue repair. Many clinical frameworks emphasize symptom-guided use rather than rigid schedules.

When cold therapy is commonly chosen

Cold therapy is commonly chosen when symptoms include visible swelling, tenderness, and a desire for short-term pain relief. Clinical advice varies by condition, and it is often used as an adjunct rather than a standalone treatment.

Common forms of cold therapy

Cold packs and compresses

Localized cooling using gel packs, ice packs, or chilled compresses. In most guidance, a cloth barrier is used to reduce skin injury risk.

Cooling wraps and sleeves

Wearable options that combine cooling with light compression. These are commonly used for joints and areas where a wrap stays in place.

Cold water exposure

Partial or whole-body cold water exposure used in recovery and wellness routines. System responses vary and depend on exposure intensity and individual tolerance.

Clinical cryotherapy

Facility-based modalities (for example, controlled cold air exposure). Evidence and indications vary by condition and clinical context.

For implementation details, see Contrast Therapy Setups.

When cold therapy is a poor fit

Cold therapy is commonly avoided in situations where circulation is impaired, sensation is reduced, or cold exposure triggers abnormal reactions.

Risks and safety considerations

Cold exposure can cause skin injury, excessive numbness, and (in whole-body settings) cardiovascular stress. Whole-body cold exposure should be approached conservatively and with attention to individual risk factors.

Stop cold exposure if you experience chest pain, severe shortness of breath, faintness, confusion, or persistent numbness.

How cold therapy fits in the system

Cold therapy is one of the two foundational thermal modalities. Heat therapy is commonly used for stiffness and relaxation contexts, while cold therapy is commonly used when swelling and acute tenderness are prominent.

For decision support, see Heat vs Cold Therapy. For the alternating approach, see Contrast Therapy.

Where to go next

Sources & review

Reviewed: 2026-01-21. Reviewed for clarity and citation coverage.

  1. [1] AAPM&R PM&R KnowledgeNow. Therapeutic Modalities – Thermal. now.aapmr.org
  2. [2] Cleveland Clinic (2025). Ice vs. Heat: What Is Best for Your Pain? health.clevelandclinic.org
  3. [3] NHS. Sprains and strains (general guidance on ice/heat use and safety). www.nhs.uk
  4. [4] Gloucestershire Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust. Ice and heat treatment (patient leaflet). www.gloshospitals.nhs.uk