Scientists have speculated that regular heat exposure, such as that experienced in a sauna, might help aging muscles adapt in ways that preserve strength and mass. A recent study found that older adults who engaged in infrared sauna sessions regularly experienced a 33% increase in the number of small blood vessels surrounding their muscle fibers.
Researchers asked 14 healthy older adults (65 to 85 years old) to sit in an infrared sauna (60°C, 140°F) for 45 minutes, three times weekly, for eight weeks. They collected muscle biopsies before and after the heat exposure to measure capillarization—the number of capillaries around each muscle fiber—as well as muscle size. They also tracked muscle protein synthesis using amino acid infusions and ultrasound imaging to assess how well blood flowed through muscle tissue after eating. Finally, they measured leg strength using a one-repetition maximum test.
After eight weeks of heat therapy, participants had 31% to 33% more capillaries surrounding both type I and type II muscle fibers. However, muscle blood flow, protein synthesis rates, leg strength, and muscle size did not improve. Body weight, body composition, and walking speed also stayed the same. The only physical performance measure that improved was handgrip strength, which increased slightly. Interestingly, systolic blood pressure dropped by 2%, while diastolic pressure and resting heart rate were unchanged.
These findings suggest that passive heat treatment can increase blood vessel density in older muscle tissue, but this change alone doesn’t improve nutrient delivery, muscle building, or strength. Heat exposure might support muscle health in other ways, but it doesn’t appear to be a replacement for resistance or aerobic exercise. Learn more about the benefits of heat exposure in Aliquot #96: Thermal Stress, Part I: The Science Behind Heat Stress and its Positive Effects on Health.