Published on: 24-Jun-2026
Introduction
Red light therapy has moved beyond wellness trends and gained attention in medical research. Scientists continue to explore how this treatment may support wound healing, reduce pain, improve skin health, encourage hair growth, and even help brain function. In this article, we look at the medical uses of red light therapy that researchers find most promising.
What do doctors say about red light therapy? Clinical researchers and doctors widely recognize red light therapy (photobiomodulation) as a legitimate, non-invasive treatment that enhances mitochondrial function and cellular energy (ATP). Medical consensus supports its efficacy in accelerating wound healing, reducing chronic musculoskeletal inflammation, improving skin collagen density, and stimulating hair follicles when high-quality devices with correct therapeutic wavelengths (typically 630nm–850nm) are used consistently.
Key Takeaways
- Wound Healing: You support faster healing by boosting cellular energy and tissue repair processes.
- Pain Relief: You may reduce pain by calming inflammation and regulating nerve signaling.
- Skin Health: You improve skin appearance by increasing collagen production and supporting skin renewal.
- Hair Growth: You can encourage hair growth by activating follicles and improving scalp circulation.
- Brain Health: You may support cognitive function by enhancing cellular energy and reducing inflammation in brain tissue.
Medical Uses of Red Light Therapy That Are Gaining Attention
Wound Healing
Red light therapy helps wound healing by stimulating cells in the skin to produce more energy, which boosts repair processes like collagen formation and new blood vessel growth, helping the wound close faster and with less inflammation. Supporting this, a large meta-analysis of 56 clinical trials found near-infrared light (630–1100 nm) significantly improved postoperative wound healing and reduced pain, showing overall positive but variable outcomes depending on treatment settings. Another study using 630 nm red light showed increased collagen and VEGF-driven angiogenesis in wounds, accelerating healing in experimental models in in vivo tests.
Pain Relief
Red light therapy helps ease pain through a process called photobiomodulation, where specific wavelengths of light penetrate the skin and influence cells, reducing inflammation, improving circulation, and calming overactive pain signals in nerves and the central nervous system. This can lower sensitivity in areas affected by chronic or injury-related pain. One study reports cutaneous red light at 660 nm reduced neuropathic pain and complex regional pain syndrome-I. Another found low-intensity laser and LED therapy reduced musculoskeletal pain in osteoarthritis, fibromyalgia, and back pain supporting drug-free pain relief approach in clinical care.
Skin Rejuvenation
Red light therapy helps skin rejuvenation through a process called photobiomodulation, where red wavelengths penetrate the skin and stimulate mitochondria to produce more ATP, the energy cells need to repair and regenerate. This boosts collagen production, improves cell signaling, and reduces oxidative stress, which together help smooth wrinkles and improve skin texture. A clinical study on 20 women using a 630 nm LED mask for 3 months found progressive reduction in wrinkles, better firmness, and improved skin tone. Another study with 136 participants confirmed increased collagen density and smoother skin, showing consistent anti-aging benefits the overall results strongly support.
Hair Growth
Red light therapy supports hair growth by using low-level laser or LED light that penetrates the scalp and stimulates mitochondria in hair follicle cells, increasing ATP energy, improving blood circulation, and helping dormant follicles enter the active growth phase while reducing inflammation. Supporting this, a systematic review and meta-analysis of FDA-cleared devices found significantly higher hair density compared with sham treatments (SMD 1.27). A double-blind randomized trial using 655 nm laser helmets also reported about a 39% increase in hair counts after 16 weeks, with no side effects observed.
Neurological and Brain Health Research
Doctors recommended Red Light Therapy, which may support brain health by improving how brain cells produce energy and communicate, which helps overall neuron function. It can improve memory and focus by increasing blood flow and supporting sharper mental performance. Early research suggests it may help in conditions like Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s by protecting brain activity. It appears safe for non-invasive use when people follow proper guidelines and sessions. It may also reduce inflammation and oxidative stress in the brain, which supports long term cognitive health. Current studies show promising results, but researchers still need larger clinical trials to confirm benefits clearly today.
Frequently Asked Questions
What do doctors say about red light therapy’s safety?
Most medical experts consider red light therapy to be a highly safe, low-risk, drug-free alternative for treating pain and skin issues. Because it does not emit dangerous ultraviolet (UV) rays, it does not carry the skin cancer risks associated with tanning beds. However, doctors advise following proper exposure protocols to prevent tissue over-saturation.
What specific wavelengths do clinical studies recommend?
Research consistently highlights wavelengths in the red spectrum (around 630nm to 660nm) for surface-level skin rejuvenation and wound healing. Near-infrared wavelengths (around 810nm to 850nm) are favored for deeper tissue penetration to alleviate joint pain, muscle soreness, and support neurological health.
Does red light therapy have proven medical benefits?
Yes. Extensive clinical trials have demonstrated that it effectively increases cellular ATP production, lowers inflammatory biomarkers, boosts collagen production, and improves microvascular blood flow to damaged tissues.
Resources:
- Wound Healing Meta-Analysis: Journal of Photochemistry and Photobiology B: Biology. “Effects of photobiomodulation therapy on postoperative wound healing: A systematic review and meta-analysis of randomized clinical trials.”
- Skin Rejuvenation & Collagen Study: Photomedicine and Laser Surgery. “A Controlled Trial to Determine the Efficacy of Red and Near-Infrared Light Treatment in Patient Satisfaction, Reduction of Fine Lines, Wrinkles, Skin Roughness, and Intradermal Collagen Density Increase.”
- Hair Density Review: Lasers in Surgery and Medicine. “Meta-analysis of the efficacy of low-level laser therapy (LLLT) / photobiomodulation (PBMT) for tissue regeneration and hair growth stimulation.”
The post Medical Uses of Red Light Therapy Gaining Doctor Attention appeared first on Sports Medicine Weekly By Dr. Brian Cole.