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Hot Asymmetries Vol. 2 Blood Flow as a Warning

Victor Escamilla

10/3/2025

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Software
Case studies
10/3/2025
Hot Asymmetries Vol. 2 Blood Flow as a Warning
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We set up a simple set-up again. We only need:

  • A space inside the club.
  • A thermal camera.
  • A computer with our software.

Before, we used to find regions with cold asymmetries. Now, it’s the hot asymmetry that matters—that’s where the problem lies. A hot asymmetry may indicate:

  • Acute inflammation.
  • Overuse or functional overload.
  • Increased local metabolism.
  • Infection.

It’s not just an alert. It’s an opportunity to intervene in time.

We don’t treat colors. We treat objective data caused by an underlying issue.

Thanks to ThermoHuman analysis and the clinical context:

  • We determine whether it’s a functional overload or inflammation to reduce the workload.
  • We assess if there is tendinopathy or structural overuse, in order to restore tone to the structure or consider complementary interventions.

We adjust the therapeutic strategy based on the region and the information provided by thermography. Depending on the type of thermal dysfunction, we apply:

  • Manual therapy to reduce muscle tone.
  • Anti-inflammatory techniques and local drainage.
  • Controlled low-impact exercise to stimulate circulation.
  • Reduced workload.
  • Active or passive vascular strategies.

All aimed at normalizing temperature and restoring function.

This is applied physiology with objective data. And we do all of this every week, without interrupting the team’s, center’s, or clinic’s routine.

Do you want to see how it integrates into your methodology?

We’ll show you how. Write to us and we’ll send you an implementation guide.

This is not theory. It’s a tool already used by elite clubs.