Photobiomodulation: The Clinical Applications of Low-Level Light Therapy

Aesthetic Surgery Journal, 41(6), 723-738

DOI 10.1093/asj/sjab025 PMID 33471046

Abstract

Background

Low-level light therapy (LLLT) is a recent addition to the pantheon of light-based therapeutic interventions. The absorption of red/near-infrared light energy, a process termed "photobiomodulation," enhances mitochondrial ATP production, cell signaling, and growth factor synthesis, and attenuates oxidative stress. Photobiomodulation is now highly commercialized with devices marketed directly to the consumer. In the gray area between the commercial and therapeutic sectors, harnessing the clinical potential in reproducible and scientifically measurable ways remains challenging.

Objectives

The aim of this article was to summarize the clinical evidence for photobiomodulation and discuss the regulatory framework for this therapy.

Methods

A review of the clinical literature pertaining to the use of LLLT for skin rejuvenation (facial rhytids and dyschromias), acne vulgaris, wound healing, body contouring, and androgenic alopecia was performed.

Results

A reasonable body of clinical trial evidence exists to support the role of low-energy red/near-infrared light as a safe and effective method of skin rejuvenation, treatment of acne vulgaris and alopecia, and, especially, body contouring. Methodologic flaws, small patient cohorts, and industry funding mean there is ample scope to improve the quality of evidence. It remains unclear if light-emitting diode sources induce physiologic effects of compararable nature and magnitude to those of the laser-based systems used in most of the higher-quality studies.

Conclusions

LLLT is here to stay. However, its ubiquity and commercial success have outpaced empirical approaches on which solid clinical evidence is established. Thus, the challenge is to prove its therapeutic utility in retrospect. Well-designed, adequately powered, independent clinical trials will help us answer some of the unresolved questions and enable the potential of this therapy to be realized.

Topics

photobiomodulation low-level light therapy clinical applications review, LLLT red near-infrared light skin rejuvenation evidence, low-level light therapy androgenic alopecia clinical trials, photobiomodulation wound healing mitochondrial ATP production, LED laser light therapy acne vulgaris body contouring, LLLT regulatory framework commercial therapeutic evidence, red light therapy clinical evidence systematic review, photobiomodulation oxidative stress cell signaling growth factors, low-level light therapy safety efficacy skin treatment, near-infrared light therapy hair loss clinical outcomes
PMID 33471046 33471046 DOI 10.1093/asj/sjab025 10.1093/asj/sjab025

Cite this article

Glass, G. E. (2021). Photobiomodulation: The Clinical Applications of Low-Level Light Therapy. *Aesthetic surgery journal*, *41*(6), 723-738. https://doi.org/10.1093/asj/sjab025