22/11/2025
Naturall Touch can help with this.
🌡 HEAT EDEMA
Why Your Body Swells in Warm Weather
By Bianca Botha, CLT | RLD | MLDT & CDS
🔥 What Is Heat Edema?
Heat edema is a medically recognised swelling response that happens when your body is exposed to warm temperatures, humidity, or poor ventilation.
When it’s hot:
✔ Your blood vessels naturally dilate (open up)
✔ More fluid moves into your tissues
✔ Your lymphatic system must work harder to drain it
✔ If the load is too high → swelling develops
This swelling commonly appears in the:
• feet
• ankles
• lower legs
• hands
• fingers
• sometimes the face
For people with lymphatic sensitivity, autoimmune conditions, inflammation, or sluggish detox organs — heat edema can be much more intense.
💧 Why Humidity Makes Swelling Worse
Humidity blocks proper sweat evaporation.
When you cannot cool down efficiently, your body keeps your vessels open for longer — increasing the fluid leak into the tissues.
This is why humid climates or stuffy buildings trigger swelling much faster than dry heat.
❄️ Why Cooling Down Helps So Fast
One of the classic signs of heat edema is that it improves quickly when you move into cool air.
Cool air = vessels constrict
Less dilation = less fluid leakage
Lymphatic load decreases
Swelling reduces in 20–30 minutes
This is a typical, confirmed physiological pattern — not “in your head.”
🌿 The Lymphatic Connection
In heat, the lymphatic system becomes overwhelmed because:
• lymph becomes thicker with dehydration
• humidity slows the body’s cooling mechanism
• inflammatory proteins rise
• lymphatic contractions become slower
If your lymphatic system is already under pressure, heat pushes it beyond its threshold.
🫁 The Liver’s Role in Heat Swelling
The liver regulates water balance, proteins, hormones, and inflammation.
When the liver is sluggish or inflamed, people often experience:
• fast swelling in heat
• puffiness after salty meals
• swelling after long standing
• slow recovery after exposure to humidity
This is why many heat edema patients improve dramatically with gentle liver support.
🦵 Why Swelling Returns at Work
Heat edema is environment-triggered.
Even if lymphatic massage or vibration therapy helps in the morning, once you step into a warm or poorly ventilated space, the blood vessels open again → swelling returns.
It does not mean your therapy “isn’t working.”
It means the environment is recreating the physiological trigger.
⭐ Science-Based Ways to Reduce Heat Edema
1. Short, frequent lymphatic stimulation
Instead of long sessions, do 2–3 minutes of:
• deep breathing
• neck sequence
• calf pumps
• abdominal clearing
2. Electrolytes
Dehydration thickens lymph.
Electrolytes thin the fluid and support vascular tone.
3. Pre-cooling before going outside
• cool cloth on the neck
• drink cold water
• spend 5 minutes in AC
• cool wrists
4. Avoid tight clothing around the waist
The abdomen is the command centre of lymph flow.
Compression around this area traps fluid in the legs.
5. Feet above heart for 10 minutes
Instantly supports drainage after coming home.
6. Liver-friendly foods
• lemon water
• beetroot
• bitter greens
• dandelion tea
• berries
• reducing processed sodium
7. Vibration plate
Great tool — but heat exposure can override its effects.
8. Manual Lymphatic Drainage
MLD remains one of the most effective therapies for heat-related swelling, especially in chronic cases.
💛 Final Thoughts
Heat edema is real.
Common.
Physiological.
And manageable.
You are not imagining the swelling, and you are not alone.
Many women and autoimmune patients experience this every summer — and with the right tools, your symptoms can dramatically improve.
— Bianca Botha, CLT | RLD | MLDT & CDS
📌 Disclaimer
This article is for informational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult your healthcare provider before making changes to your diet, exercise, or health regimen.