Current technologies to treat end stage renal disease (ESRD) include peritoneal dialysis, hemodialysis and transplantation all of which are expensive. This invention is an inexpensive method to decrease body toxins that requires immersion of a body in a hot water bath with sorbents. In a hot water bath, secretory coils within activated sweat glands function as a semipermeable membrane that can dialyze toxins. Sorbents such charcoals and smectite clays located within the secretory coils of sweat glands in the vicinity of the zonula occludens can adsorb toxins. A subject who was immersed in a hot water bath with dissolved activated charcoal for a total time of approximately two hours presumably developed heparin deficiency from the adsorption of heparin onto activated charcoal. This invention is not expected to replace hemodialysis or peritoneal dialysis for the treatment of ESRD, but it may delay the initiation of traditional dialysis, decrease the number of high cost traditional dialysis procedures and improve quality of life. Patients who do not suffer from ESRD but who claim wellbeing from periodic detoxification may benefit from this invention. However, caution needs to exercised that unmonitored indiscriminate adsorption from hot water sorbent baths pose some dangers.