A Stanford physiologist explains how cooling the palms, soles, and face can dramatically boost athletic performance and debunks common cooling myths.

Dr. Craig Heller — Professor of biology and neurosciences at Stanford whose lab studies thermoregulation, Down syndrome, and circadian rhythms. He co-developed palmar-cooling technology and has chaired Stanford's biology department and directed its human biology program.
Dr. Craig Heller explains how the body heats and cools itself and how core temperature is one of the most powerful limiters of physical and mental performance. He reveals that muscles fail in large part because a temperature-sensitive enzyme shuts off fuel supply when muscles overheat, and that special hairless ('glabrous') skin on the palms, soles, and face contains blood vessels (AVAs) that act as the body's true radiators. Cooling these surfaces, not the neck, torso, or armpits, can double or triple work volume, eliminate delayed-onset muscle soreness, and dwarf the gains from anabolic steroids. He debunks ice packs on the neck and brown-fat-stimulating ice on the upper back, and finishes with insights on hibernating bears, shivering, caffeine, and why a cool sleep environment helps.
Books, products and media the guest or host genuinely endorsed here — with the buy link.
Affiliate link — we may earn a commission at no extra cost to you.
Arteria
“the company is Arteria, A-R-T-E-R-I-A, and the website is www.coolmitt.com. So CoolMitt is just C-O-O-L-M-I-T-T.” — guest 00:53:42Find it on Amazon