
Opportunity
Interactive Cryotherapy Research Booklet
A fast, localized modality for pain, swelling, and mobility conversations.
Deep Blue Cryo is positioned around a practical clinical and commercial opportunity: everyday musculoskeletal discomfort, inflammation, swelling, soreness, and movement limitation. The strongest message is not a cure-all claim; it is a fast adjunct that helps providers support recovery and patient comfort inside real clinic and gym workflows.
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Use the rail to explore the booklet, then download the branded PDF for sharing with prospects or clinic teams.
Proof-point matrix
Evidence made demo-ready.
The booklet translates the research brief into short, credible talking points that are appropriate for professional education and prospect discussion.

Visible + measurable
Thermography can help identify target areas, validate pain points, and show pre/post education visuals.
Scientific mechanisms
The four mechanisms to explain.
Pain modulation / analgesia
Cold exposure can reduce sensory nerve conduction and dull pain signaling, supporting pre-rehab or post-activity comfort conversations.
Anti-inflammatory response
Cooling is frequently discussed as an anti-inflammatory physical modality because inflammatory mediators can irritate nearby nerves.
Anti-edema / swelling control
Cryotherapy literature describes cold exposure as having anti-edema effects and supporting drainage of swollen areas.
Mobility and function support
Reducing pain and swelling may help patients or athletes participate more comfortably in movement-based care.
Targeted high-pressure difference
Built for real-world workflow.
Targeted instead of general
A concise value point for clinics, gyms, teams, and recovery centers evaluating targeted cryotherapy as an adjunctive service.
Fast enough for appointments
A concise value point for clinics, gyms, teams, and recovery centers evaluating targeted cryotherapy as an adjunctive service.
Visible and measurable
A concise value point for clinics, gyms, teams, and recovery centers evaluating targeted cryotherapy as an adjunctive service.
Premium patient/member moment
A concise value point for clinics, gyms, teams, and recovery centers evaluating targeted cryotherapy as an adjunctive service.


Protocol + safety
Professional framing protects credibility.
Use temperature monitoring and/or thermography before, during, and after treatment.
Maintain an optimized skin-surface temperature near 35°F / 1.66°C when following the source protocol.
Adjust treatment length by body region, tissue density, and patient response.
Base frequency on provider judgment, severity, and area treated; maintain appropriate spacing between sessions.
Screen carefully for contraindication categories including neuropathy, nerve damage, vascular complications, active infection, fibromyalgia, and pigmentary-change concerns.
Use-case targeting
Who this booklet helps persuade.
Chiropractors
Pain, mobility, muscle guarding, adjunct before manual therapy.
Physical therapy clinics
Movement tolerance, swelling conversations, post-activity soreness.
Gyms + recovery centers
Member recovery service, demo-day conversion, premium add-on.
Sports teams
Athlete recovery workflows and fast localized treatment windows.
Download the branded PDF.
The downloadable booklet includes the official Deep Blue Cryo logo, research highlights, protocol guidance, references, and a professional disclaimer.
Download bookletReferences included
1. Sieron, A., Cieslar, G., Stanek, A., et al. Cryotherapy: Theoretical bases, biological effects, clinical applications. alpha-medica press, 2010.
2. Dahlhamer J, Lucas J, Zelaya C, et al. Prevalence of Chronic Pain and High-Impact Chronic Pain Among Adults — United States, 2016. MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep. 2018;67:1001–1006.
3. Hohenauer E, Taeymans J, Baeyens JP, Clarys P, Clijsen R. The Effect of Post-Exercise Cryotherapy on Recovery Characteristics: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis. PLOS ONE. 2015;10(9):e0139028.
4. Dupuy O, Douzi W, Theurot D, Bosquet L, Dugué B. An Evidence-Based Approach for Choosing Post-exercise Recovery Techniques. Front Physiol. 2018;9:403.
5. Chen R, et al. The effects of hydrotherapy and cryotherapy on recovery from exercise induced muscle damage: a systematic review and network meta-analysis. Front Physiol. 2024.
6. Garcia C, et al. Use of Cryotherapy for Managing Chronic Pain: An Evidence-Based Narrative. Pain Ther. 2021.
For professional education and prospect discussion only. Not a substitute for medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment.