Red Light Therapy: How It Works and What It Does

When the U.S. track team headed to the 2016 OlymĀ­pics in Rio, they brought along a $181,000 photoĀ­ biomodulation podā€”a red light bed. Their coach, Alberto Salazar, swore by its power to proĀ­mote recovery and heal injuries, allowing the athletes to train harder.

Thanks to new, affordable LED technolĀ­ogy, this therapy is now available for the rest of us. Planet Fitness offers it at its clubs. There are even atĀ­-home systems, like Joovv (seen here, starting at $700).

Fans insist that 10 or 15 minutes of light a few times a week is all it takes to reap beneĀ­ fits like less joint pain and soreness. Sound too good to be true? Maybe not.

Weird Recovery Methods that Actually Work

ā€œRed light therapy may help you recover from exercise, sleep better, heal wounds and injuries like tendonitis, reduce arthriĀ­tisā€”and it may simply make you feel better, which is something thatā€™s hard to quantify,ā€ says Michael Hamblin, a photomedicine researcher at Harvard Medical School who has been studying light therapy for three decades.

Hereā€™s how it works: Different colors of light penetrate skin with different intensiĀ­ties. Those light waves then stimulate cell activity. Light on the red spectrum stimuĀ­lates cell regeneration. (Ultraviolet light, by contrast, causes cell damage.) Red light gets absorbed by the superficial layer of the skin (which is why itā€™s used by dermatologists for a variety of conditions). Near infrared is able to penetrate deeper and is used for deep muscle recovery. Red light therapy is free of side effects; only a small percentage of people may be sensitive to the light, Hamblin says. And, unlike lasers, LED lights are safe for the eyes.

Thereā€™s still more research to be done, but if youā€™ve been interested in red light therapy, consider it greenĀ­lighted.

The post Red Light Therapy: How It Works and What It Does appeared first on Men's Journal.



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