Arizona Tribune - Client brain-dead after Paris cryotherapy session goes wrong

NYSE - LSE
RBGPF -4.49% 77.68 $
CMSC -0.13% 23.27 $
RYCEF 2.01% 14.9 $
SCS 0.12% 16.14 $
NGG 1.47% 76.05 $
GSK 1.1% 49.355 $
VOD 1.06% 12.725 $
RELX 1.7% 41.08 $
AZN 1.93% 91.598 $
RIO 0.12% 75.75 $
CMSD 0.51% 23.37 $
JRI 0.25% 13.5999 $
BCC -0.78% 75.92 $
BCE 0.41% 23.491 $
BTI 0.91% 57.625 $
BP -0.1% 35.225 $
Client brain-dead after Paris cryotherapy session goes wrong
Client brain-dead after Paris cryotherapy session goes wrong / Photo: YASUYOSHI CHIBA - AFP

Client brain-dead after Paris cryotherapy session goes wrong

A woman injured during a fatal cryotherapy session at a gym in France's capital earlier this week is now brain-dead, the prosecutor's office said Friday.

Text size:

The client, in her early thirties, was admitted to hospital in a critical condition after the accident late Monday claimed the life of an employee in her late twenties.

The client has been brain-dead since Thursday, the Paris prosecutor's office said.

An autopsy on the first victim showed she suffocated due to a lack of oxygen, it added, which might confirm the theory of a nitrogen leak into the cryotherapy chamber.

Cryotherapy uses vaporised liquid nitrogen or nitrous oxide to lower the skin's surface temperature to below minus 100 degrees Celsius (minus 148 Fahrenheit) for a recommended time of no more than three minutes.

Nitrogen is a colourless, odourless gas. It makes up around 80 percent of the air we breathe, while oxygen accounts for 20 percent.

But a nitrogen leak in a closed space could lead to oxygen depletion.

Advocates say whole-body cryotherapy is effective in reducing muscle soreness, stress, rheumatism and various skin conditions -- like ice baths.

But many experts warn that the treatment has not been proven to be medically sound and are urging further research to determine the short- and long-term effects.

Cryotherapy sessions came under scrutiny in the United States in 2015 after a woman froze to death at a Las Vegas spa.

The 24-year-old woman was believed to have entered one of the spa's cold chambers after business hours to relieve some aches, and was discovered the next day by a co-worker.

A.O.Scott--AT