Honey massage

Honey massage

Biological effect:

It detoxifies the subcutaneous tissues, nourishes the skin, and has a skin-renewing effect. It normalizes the skin and the water balance of the subcutaneous connective tissue (restores connective tissue and normalizes water balance). It helps relax tense muscles, reduces inflammation, cleanses, detoxifies the skin, clears pores, enhances the elimination of waste products in the body, and strengthens the immune system. It replenishes the skin with minerals and trace elements. Honey contains numerous vitamins, including B1, B2, B3, B5, B6, and vitamin C. It also contains calcium, copper, iron, magnesium, manganese, phosphorus, potassium, sodium, zinc, natural antioxidants, amino acids, proteins, and 22 types of macro- and microelements.

Treatment process:

The treatment begins with skin brushing. The skin brush is a mixture of high-quality sugar and yogurt. This is followed by a Swedish massage with honey oil, and finally, a honey wrap on the back, made from high-quality producer honey and a small amount of oil. The treated area is covered with foil, and the guest rests for 20 minutes while the active ingredients and vitamins in the honey are absorbed into the skin.

Duration:

100 minutes (10 minutes of skin brushing, 60 minutes of massage, 30 minutes of relaxation).

Indications:

It is recommended as a complementary therapy for rheumatism, as a muscle relaxant for those working at a computer, and it also alleviates chronic headaches. The primary goal is to increase muscle strength and elasticity, boost metabolism, and maintain the youthfulness and elasticity of the skin.

Contraindications:

Heart and circulatory diseases: within six months after a heart attack, heart failure, high blood pressure unresponsive to drug therapy, phlebitis, hyperthyroidism, epilepsy, multiple sclerosis, inflammatory phase of musculoskeletal diseases, incontinence (partial or complete disorder of bowel or bladder control), bleeding tendency, anticoagulant use, menstruation, within five years after cancer, and even after that based on individual assessment, infectious diseases, open wounds or injuries, infectious skin diseases, feverish conditions, pregnancy, local skin changes (skin injuries, skin diseases), varicose veins in the lower limbs should be avoided, caution is required with bleeding tendency or anticoagulant medication use.