Hot springs, hot-water bathing, and saunas are widely practiced forms of acute heat exposure and are often perceived as health-promoting. However, emergency clinicians frequently encounter patients in whom these exposures precipitate syncope, hypotension, drowning/aspiration, heat-related illness, and renal or electrolyte disturbances. This narrative review integrates these modalities within a unified “acute heat exposure” framework and summarizes pathophysiology and clinical implications from an emergency medicine perspective. We searched PubMed/MEDLINE from inception to January 2026 using controlled vocabulary and free-text terms related to heat stress, thermoregulation, hot-water immersion, sauna exposure, and acute clinical outcomes; evidence was synthesized qualitatively. Across modalities, acute heat exposure induces shared physiological responses—peripheral vasodilation, relative hypovolemia, circulatory stress, and internal heat storage—that can trigger diverse emergency presentations. We classify acute heat exposure–related illness into four domains: (1) cardiovascular events, including syncope, hypotension, and arrhythmic/ischemic complications in vulnerable individuals; (2) the heat-illness spectrum from exhaustion to heat stroke with organ dysfunction; (3) renal and electrolyte disturbances related to dehydration and hypoperfusion; and (4) neurological and traumatic complications, including falls, drowning, and aspiration. This framework may support risk stratification, evaluation, management, and prevention after hot spring, hot bath, or sauna use.
Yokoyama et al. (Tue,) studied this question.