Laser therapy reduces inflammatory cytokines

Photomedicine and Laser SurgeryThe therapeutic use of non-invasive, low level (cold) laser and and infrared has not crossed the gap into clinical practice to the degree that the rich body of scientific research justifies. The laser and infrared therapies we use here appear to help even though you can’t feel them (at the time of application); but what evidence is there that they really do anything? And by what mechanisms? Consider this study published in the journal Photomedicine and Laser Surgery a few years ago that documents the effect of visible and infrared light on inflammatory cytokines (immune system messenger molecules). The authors state:

“The aim of this randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blind trial was to investigate changes in the content of 10 cytokines in the human peripheral blood after transcutaneous [through the skin] and in vitro [to blood removed from the body] irradiation with polychromatic visible and infrared (IR) polarized light…”

The magnitude of the effect that they observed by just applying the light to the sacral area of the study subjects is surprising:

“A dramatic decrease in the level of pro-inflammatory cytokines TNF-α, IL-6, and IFN-γ was revealed: at 0.5 h after exposure of volunteers (with the initial parameters exceeding the norm), the cytokine contents fell, on average, 34, 12, and 1.5 times. The reduced concentrations of TNF-α and IL-6 were preserved after four daily exposures, whereas levels of IFN-γ and IL-12 decreased five and 15 times. At 0.5 h and at later times, the amount of anti-inflammatory cytokines was found to rise: that of IL-10 rose 2.7–3.5 times (in subjects with normal initial parameters) and of TGF-β1 1.4–1.5 times.”

But if you expose just the area over the sacrum, what happens when that blood mixes with the rest of the circulation?

Similar regularities of the light effects were recorded after in vitro irradiation of blood, as well as on mixing the irradiated and non-irradiated autologous blood at a volume ratio 1:10 (i.e., at modeling the events in a vascular bed of the exposed person when a small amount of the transcutaneously photomodified blood contacts its main circulating volume).”

In other words, a small limited application causes system-wide effects. Considering how much we need therapies that physiologically modulate the inflammatory response without side effects, the authors’ conclusion is extremely compelling:

Exposure of a small area of the human body to light leads to a fast decrease in the elevated pro-inflammatory cytokine plasma content and to an increase in the the anti-inflammatory factor concentration, which may be an important mechanism of the anti-inflammatory effect of phototherapy. These changes result from transcutaneous photomodification of a small volume of blood and a fast transfer of the light-induced changes to the entire pool of circulating blood [!].”

Here’s a little more from the large body of research published in the same journal:

By the way, this is interesting in connection with the earlier post on the infrared treatment of depression.

Low-level laser therapy helps breast cancer-related lymphedema

Supportive Care in CancerLymphedema is swelling due to engorgement with lymph fluid. In the case of  breast cancer it occurs after therapies that remove lymph nodes and damage delicate lymph vessels cause a stagnation of the lymph fluid. Breast cancer-related lymphedema is uncomfortable and a risk factor for infection due to impaired lymphatic drainage in the affected arm. A paper just published in the journal Supportive Care in Cancer reports on the effectiveness of low-level laser therapy (LLLT, also known as ‘cold’ laser therapy to distinguish it from cutting surgical lasers) in the treatment of BCRL. The authors begin by observing:

“Breast-cancer-related lymphedema (BCRL) is a chronic disease, and currently there is no definitive treatment for it…Low-level laser therapy (LLLT) has been used in the treatment of post-mastectomy lymphedema since 2007 in the US. The aim of this study is to review our short-term experience with LLLT in the treatment of BCRL.”

The authors assessed the circumferences of both affected and unaffected arms (swelling), pain, restriction due to scars, and range of motion of the affected arm to gauge the impact of LLLT. The outcomes led to this conclusion:

“Patients with BCRL received additional benefits from LLLT when used in conjunction with standard lymphedema treatment. These benefits include reduction in limb circumference, pain, increase in range of motion and scar mobility. Additionally, two cycles of LLLT were found to be superior to one in this study.”

Note: Low-level laser therapy is widely available (including at Lapis Light), comfortable and non-invasive.

Low-level laser therapy effective for neck pain

It doesn’t feel at the time like anything is happening, but can non-cutting (non-surgical) laser light be therapeutic? The authors of this paper that was recently published in The Lancet reviewed 16 randomised controlled trials of low-level (cold) laser therapy including a total of 820 patients. They conclude: “We show that LLLT reduces pain immediately after treatment in acute neck pain and up to 22 weeks after completion of treatment in patients with chronic neck pain.”