HerRelief is built on two mechanisms that pain researchers have studied for decades: targeted heat therapy and gate-control vibration. No folk wisdom — just peer-reviewed evidence.
Topical heat at 40°C (104°F) increases blood flow to the uterus and relaxes the cramping smooth muscle that causes dysmenorrhea. In a controlled clinical trial, continuous low-level heat matched the pain relief of 400mg ibuprofen — with faster onset and zero systemic side effects.
Heat also activates TRPV1 receptors in the skin, which block pain signals at the spinal cord. This is the same pathway capsaicin cream uses — but without the burning sensation.
Akin, M. et al. (2001). “Continuous low-level topical heat in the treatment of dysmenorrhea.” Obstetrics & Gynecology, 97(3), 343–349. PubMed: 11239634
Abdel-Salam, O. (2014). “Capsaicin as a therapeutic molecule.” Progress in Drug Research, 68.
In 1965, Ronald Melzack and Patrick Wall proposed the gate-control theory of pain: non-painful sensory input (like vibration) stimulates fast A-β nerve fibers that race to the spinal cord and close the “gate” before slower pain signals can reach the brain.
It’s why rubbing a stubbed toe helps. It’s the same mechanism behind TENS units used in physical therapy. HerRelief’s targeted vibration does the same thing — outpacing cramp signals before they reach your awareness.
Melzack, R. & Wall, P. D. (1965). “Pain mechanisms: a new theory.” Science, 150(3699), 971–979. One of the most cited papers in pain research — the foundation of modern neurostimulation therapy.
A 2019 clinical study compared heat therapy alone versus heat combined with vibration for primary dysmenorrhea. The combined group reported significantly greater reduction in pain intensity — the two mechanisms stack.
Lee, B. et al. (2019). “Effect of vibration on pain during local heat therapy in primary dysmenorrhea.” Journal of Physical Therapy Science, 31(2), 159–163.
FDA-recognized modality
Topical heat therapy and TENS-style vibration are both FDA-recognized treatments for musculoskeletal and menstrual pain.
No NSAIDs, no drugs
Unlike ibuprofen and naproxen, there's no risk of GI irritation, kidney stress, or interaction with other medication.
Temperature-controlled
Three heat levels (104°F / 113°F / 122°F) — all within the therapeutic range validated in heat-therapy studies. Auto-shutoff at 2 hours.
When to check with a doctor
Severe or sudden period pain can signal endometriosis, fibroids, or other conditions. Heat therapy helps, but isn't a diagnostic. Talk to your doctor if pain is new, severe, or worsening.
Proctor, M. & Farquhar, C. (2006). “Dysmenorrhoea.” BMJ Clinical Evidence, 2006:0813. PubMed: 16973981 — evidence review of treatments for primary dysmenorrhea.
All citations are from peer-reviewed medical journals. Click the PubMed links to verify independently.
Heat. Vibration. Zero pills. Backed by decades of pain research.
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