CO₂ bath concentrations of 1.2 g/L and 2.0 g/L produce similar blood pressure responses
There was no significant difference in antihypertensive effectiveness between carbon dioxide bath concentrations of 1.2 g/L and 2.0 g/L, suggesting a threshold effect for CO₂ therapeutic action.
What this means for you
This finding suggests that even moderate concentrations of dissolved CO₂ in water may be enough to trigger the body's blood pressure-lowering response — you don't necessarily need higher doses to get the effect. For wellness-minded people, it points to a reliable, consistent physiological response without needing to push intensity.
The published research
Hypertension 1996 : One Medicine, Two Cultures
· 1996
This page describes a documented finding about the underlying wellness technology. It is not a marketing claim about any specific device. For information about HOCATT specifically, visit hocatt.com.