I’ve been using a red light therapy panel from Future Form Official, a company based in Norway, and it’s been amazing for my health! My physiotherapist recommended it, and I’ve seen significant improvements in my chronic back pain and overall energy levels. The best part is that the panel is priced very reasonably. Thank you so much for sharing this information and helping others understand the benefits of red light therapy!
I have been using the Omnilux LED mask and absolutely see a difference. I learned of this mask at a plastic surgeon's office. To see results, you need to incorporate this into your personal skincare routine and use it as the manufacturer recommends.
There was a study in ‘06, ‘09, ‘13, ‘14 and ‘17 on RLT so I don’t think this dermatologist has done his homework. I do know a Dermatologist who uses RLT at home and she has a RU-vid channel.
I when use normal led light strip of good quality in my room in night to sleep next day I feel better like so refreshed like everything in my body is relaxed
Why wouldn’t using an at home device be better; especially if it pertains to frequency and lower cost per treatment or return on investment for a device? What do I look for when shopping for joules per cm2? Does the LED need to contain both red and near infrared for efficacy?
Crowd sourced data outweighs medically accepted studies especially in the US where alternative/adjunct therapies are actively downplayed for the purpose of maintaining a stronghold on the now insidious industry. And if light therapy is possibly ineffective then why is it used on newborns to safeguard against jaundice?
He did not say red light therapy is “possibly ineffective”. Nor is he downplaying red light therapy. He is advocating to get your skin checked out first and look into higher quality red light over $400 omnilux masks (which are half the cost on Alibaba). As of right now there is only FDA regulation for safety but not efficacy. Also, some of us with deeper skin tones cannot rely on “crowd-sourced data” to understand how long-term use affects our melanocytes and the types of melasma (epidermal, dermal, or mixed) over time. He is not downplaying anything. If anything his word is helping people who are more cautious because of their skin type.
When did he say to not do it at home? Nothing about this video was negative. He implied that at-home treatments are fine but he would rather advocate for a professional grade light system than a cheap one. Y’all get offended over nothing.
@@dio5731 We have been pushed and programmed to let go of our basic instincts and common sense to a point we’re unable to think for ourselves. We don’t need to ask a doctor for an opinion for most things we do. Not to long ago, we were asking priests to make daily life decisions for us.
I had an in-office red light treatment, and my melasma flared up. Many people will say it will help melasma, but it made mine so much worse after ONE treatment
Infrared light will make malasma worse because it heats up the skin, anything that heats the skin (sun, hot showers, saunas, infrared light) will indeed make malasma worse but led red light will not make malasma worse, it should offer many skin benefits including help with any kind of hyperpigmentation. Look up some videos explain the difference between the two and also if you do purchase an at home device than make sure it is led red light, some devices will offer both and some only one or the other. You would want led red light therapy.
I heard red light isn't an issue for melasma and hyperpigmentation but many of these devices use infrared light as well as red light. And infrared light is the one that can cause melasma and hyperpigmentation to get worse because it produces heat