LLLT of Eye and Brain
LLLT of Eye and Brain
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open access to scientific and medical research
Review
Abstract: Low-level light therapy (LLLT) using red to near-infrared light energy has gained
attention in recent years as a new scientific approach with therapeutic applications in ophthalmology, neurology, and psychiatry. The ongoing therapeutic revolution spearheaded by LLLT
is largely propelled by progress in the basic science fields of photobiology and bioenergetics.
This paper describes the mechanisms of action of LLLT at the molecular, cellular, and nervous
tissue levels. Photoneuromodulation of cytochrome oxidase activity is the most important primary
mechanism of action of LLLT. Cytochrome oxidase is the primary photoacceptor of light in the
red to near-infrared region of the electromagnetic spectrum. It is also a key mitochondrial enzyme
for cellular bioenergetics, especially for nerve cells in the retina and the brain. Evidence shows
that LLLT can secondarily enhance neural metabolism by regulating mitochondrial function,
intraneuronal signaling systems, and redox states. Current knowledge about LLLT dosimetry
relevant for its hormetic effects on nervous tissue, including noninvasive in vivo retinal and
transcranial effects, is also presented. Recent research is reviewed that supports LLLT potential
benefits in retinal disease, stroke, neurotrauma, neurodegeneration, and memory and mood
disorders. Since mitochondrial dysfunction plays a key role in neurodegeneration, LLLT has
potential significant applications against retinal and brain damage by counteracting the consequences of mitochondrial failure. Upon transcranial delivery in vivo, LLLT induces brain
metabolic and antioxidant beneficial effects, as measured by increases in cytochrome oxidase
and superoxide dismutase activities. Increases in cerebral blood flow and cognitive functions
induced by LLLT have also been observed in humans. Importantly, LLLT given at energy
densities that exert beneficial effects does not induce adverse effects. This highlights the value
of LLLT as a novel paradigm to treat visual, neurological, and psychological conditions, and
supports that neuronal energy metabolism could constitute a major target for neurotherapeutics
of the eye and brain.
Keywords: photobiomodulation, cytochrome oxidase, neurotherapeutics, retinal disease,
neurological disease, cognitive and mood disorders
Introduction
Correspondence: F Gonzalez-Lima
University of Texas at Austin, 1 University
Station A8000, Austin, TX 78712, USA
Tel +1 512 471 5895
Fax +1 512 471 5935
Email [email protected]
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http://dx.doi.org/10.2147/EB.S21391
Low-level light therapy (LLLT) has gained attention in recent years as a novel tool
for experimental therapeutic applications in a variety of medical conditions. The current paradigm shift in the field of neurotherapeutics has allowed consideration of this
innovative approach in attempts to modify the function of the nervous system. Patients,
research laboratories, the media, and industry around the world are devoting attention
to the potential therapeutic applications of LLLT in neurology and other medical fields
that have traditionally had a limited therapeutic contribution to patient care. In recent
years, the use of LLLT has extended beyond the realms of pain and wound healing,
Eye and Brain 2011:3 4967
49
2011 Rojas and Gonzalez-Lima, publisher and licensee Dove Medical Press Ltd. This is an Open Access
article which permits unrestricted noncommercial use, provided the original work is properly cited.
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What is LLLT?
Light is a type of electromagnetic radiation with both
wave-like and particle-like properties. Living organisms
are immersed in a vast ocean of electromagnetic radiation,
which consists of periodic oscillations in electromagnetic
fields that travel space and are thus able to transfer energy.
Hence, light is a form of energy called luminous energy.
A wave of electromagnetic radiation has a unidirectional
vector and can be characterized in terms of its wavelength
( = the distance between successive peaks or troughs),
frequency (the number of oscillations per second), and
a mplitude (the difference between trough and peak).
A complex mixture of waves with different frequencies,
amplitudes, and wavelengths are absorbed, scattered, and
reflected by objects, including biological material. Light of
only one wavelength is called monochromatic. In modern
quantum physics, electromagnetic radiation consists of
photons, which are particles (quanta) of energy that travel
at a speed of 3108 m/second. The brightness of light is the
number of photons and the color of the light is the energy
contained in each photon. LLLT can be defined as the use
of directional low-power and high-fluence monochromatic
or quasimonochromatic light from lasers or light-emitting
diodes (LEDs) in the red to near-infrared wavelengths
( = 6001100 nm) to modulate a biological function or
induce a therapeutic effect in a nondestructive and nonthermal manner.2,3 The effects of LLLT implicate conversion
of luminous energy to metabolic energy with a subsequent
modulation of the biological functioning of cells. Thus,
LLLT is commonly known as photobiomodulation. It could
also be called photoneuromodulation when nerve cells are
the target. LLLT differs from the conventional effects of
high-energy photon delivery commonly associated with
lasers, which are mediated by a greater release of energy
and result in heating and tissue destruction through dissection, ablation, coagulation, and vaporization. Compared to
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Photobiology of LLLT
Properties of LLLT
The major source of electromagnetic radiation in the
environment is sunlight. Solar energy contains a rich combination of waves within the electromagnetic spectrum, including all wavelengths in the visible spectrum. Solar energy is
multidirectional and noncoherent, which means that energy
waves are not synchronized in space and time. LLLT differs
from solar energy in that it is monochromatic and allows for
potential high specificity and targeted molecular biomodulation (Figure1). On the other hand, lasers feature monochromatic, unidirectional, and coherent electromagnetic radiation,
which allows delivery of significant levels of concentrated
energy. Because of this, many biomedical applications of
lasers are characterized by the destructive effects of energy
over very discrete areas of tissues. The advantages of lasers
include high tissue penetration, their efficient fiber optic
coupling, and high monochromaticity.
LLLT can be produced by LED arrays as well as lasers.
Both sources have been used for photobiomodulation of
the eye and brain. Laser sources produce 100% of coherent
light energy in a single wavelength. They allow high tissue
Sunlight
Laser
Light-emitting diode
Figure 1 Properties of low-level light. Sunlight is composed of a combination
of noncoherent waves with wavelengths spanning the entire visible spectrum. In
contrast, lasers emit waves of a single wavelength (monochromatic) that have
spatial and temporal synchronization. This high wavelength coherence allows the
transmission of energy at a high power density. Finally, low-level light consists
of monochromatic or quasimonochromatic waves taking different paths leading
to a common target point. While wavelength, radiant exposure, irradiance, and
fractionation scheme are relevant for low-level light therapy applications, the
authors introduce the possibility that noncoherence may be advantageous for
some neurometabolic purposes. Noncoherence allows nervous tissue exposure
at therapeutic wavelengths at relatively low power densities during the time
necessary to modulate neural metabolism in response to activation or injury, even
if this time is prolonged.
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relevant when the target organ has a large surface area, such
as the brain. LED arrays and diode lasers are compact and
portable, which is relevant in a clinical setting, and LEDs
have achieved nonsignificant risk status for human trials by
the FDA.9
Major dosimetric parameters relevant for LLLT studies
are starting to become more standardized. Confusion about
the effects of LLLT is evident in the literature, and it derives
from lack of standardization of parameters relevant for
LLLT. Until more is known about the dosimetry, the convention should be to report all relevant parameters involved
in a particular LLLT use (Table1, Figure2). In contrast to
traditional pharmacology, in which dose is a major determinant of the effect, LLLT is also dependent on power density,
energy density, frequency, fractionation, wavelength, contact
modality, source, and physicochemical properties of the
target tissue.
Unit
Explanation
Wavelength
nm (nanometers)
Energy
J (joules)
Power
Irradiance
W (Watts)
W/cm2
Radiant exposure
J/cm2
Exposure time
Wave type
Seconds
Continuous versus pulsed
Fraction protocol
Number of fractions
Aperture
Delivery mode
Wavelength () is the distance between wave peaks. Light is a form of energy with
wave behavior. Photoacceptors exhibit different sensitivities to different wavelengths.
The most effective LLLT wavelength range is 6001100 nm. Light visible to the human
eye is 400700 nm. The higher the wavelength the lower the energy.
Energy (E) is the frequency (v) of radiation by Plancks constant (h) of
6.626 10-34 J sec (E = hv). Energy of a photon depends on the frequency
of radiation (Ephoton = hv). A photon is a particle of electromagnetic radiation
with zero mass and a quantum of energy (minimum E gained or lost by atom).
Energy (J) = Power (W) Time (seconds).
Amount of energy (J) transferred or flowing per unit of time (W = J/seconds).
Power (W) per surface area (cm2). Also called power density or light intensity.
Irradiance = Power (W) / Area (cm2).
Energy (J) per surface area (cm2). Equivalent to power density per unit of time
(seconds). Also called fluence, energy density, or light dose. Thus, dose can be
easily varied by changes in exposure time. However, at the same energy density
(J/cm2) variations in either irradiance (W/cm2) or time may cause different
LLLT effects on tissues.
Time during which the target tissue is exposed to light.
Continuous waves may be advantageous for transcranial applications. Pulse waves
may decrease thermal effects. Pulse Average Power = Peak Power (W) Pulse Width
(seconds) Pulse Frequency (Hz).
Total dose can be divided in treatment sessions or fractions of specific duration
and separated by specific intervals of time (eg, minutes, hours, days).
Can be parallel, convergent, or divergent. Aperture may influence efficiency and
tissue penetration.
Types: shallow (or noncontact), contact, and deep. Shallow is preferable when larger
areas need to be exposed, but offers lower tissue penetration for light-emitting
diodes. Deep delivery implicates pressure of the beam source on the target tissue.
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Short wavelength
Long wavelength
Stimulation
Surface
5 mm
1 J/cm2
0.1 J/cm2
Biological effect
100 J/cm2
10 J/cm2
0.01
0.1
10
100
Dose, J/cm2
White matter
Gray matter
Inhibition
Figure 3 Hormetic effects of low-level light therapy (LLLT). LLLT does not induce
classical linear dose-response pharmacological effects. LLLT effects are characterized
by inverted U-shaped dose-response curves, in which linear responses may be seen
only at very low doses. Whereas linear effects may be negligible, maximal stimulatory
effects are typically observed at intermediate doses. However, the linear relationship
does not hold at high doses, since inhibitory effects are observed instead. In fact, the
inhibitory effects of very high LLLT doses might be worse than control conditions
(eg, tissue destruction). A key observation concerning the modulatory effects of
light in tissues is that maximal responses at intermediate doses tend to represent
less than twofold increases in biological variables relative to baseline conditions.
Yet these effects have been shown to have major relevance, especially when energy
metabolism is involved in nervous tissue. Thus, hormesis is an essential concept for
the development of neurotherapeutic applications of LLLT.
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Pigmented
epithelium
Photoreceptor outer
segment
Photoreceptor effect:
PhotoTRANSDUCTION
Bipolar cell
Photoacceptor effect:
PhotoBIOMODULATION
Near-infrared light
Figure 4 Differential effects of light on photoreceptors and photoacceptors in the
retina. Light reaches the retina and travels through the different retinal layers to reach
the outermost photoreceptor layer. It then excites the photoreceptor rhodopsin
in rods and cones, triggering the process of phototransduction. Phototransduction
causes photoreceptor cell hyperpolarization, changes in neurotransmission, and
action potentials (yellow arrows) in bipolar cells and ganglion cells. These effects
represent the onset of visual information processing. Light can also directly excite
photoacceptors in neurons including retinal ganglion cells. The main photoacceptor
in the red to near-infrared spectrum is the mitochondrial respiratory enzyme
cytochrome oxidase. The effects of light on neuronal cytochrome oxidase induce
modulation of cell bioenergetic mechanisms that are independent from visual
processing. Yet photobiomodulation has major implications in neuronal physiology
and homeostasis.
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physiology. Consistent with this idea, a number of intracellular effects have been described during and after light
excitation. Based on these data, a mechanistic hypothesis
on the mechanism of action of LLLT has been advanced.
For study purposes, the mechanistic effects of LLLT can be
divided into primary (during light exposure) and secondary
(after light exposure).
Primary effects
Primary effects refer to the direct photochemical change
occurring in the photoacceptor upon excitation by light.
Primary effects are light-dependent and they occur only
while the target tissue is being exposed to light. Current evidence is available to support at least three different primary
effects. The first and most important primary effect is a redox
change of the components of the respiratory chain. LLLT can
induce reduction or oxidation of cytochrome oxidase. These
changes in redox status correlate with the bell-shaped doseresponse recorded for cellular responses.3 Changes in the
redox status of cytochrome oxidase implicate alterations in
electron flow. LLLT increases cytochrome c oxidation in the
presence of cytochrome oxidase, causes increases in oxygen
consumption and mitochondrial membrane potential, and
activates the mitochondrial permeability transition pore.21,20
All of these events have been associated with accelerated
electron flow in the mitochondrial electron transport chain.
The second possible primary effect is the generation of free
radicals, including singlet oxygen via direct photodynamic
action and superoxide ion via one electron auto-oxidation.
The significance of this effect is that reactive oxygen species
are not only damaging by-products of respiration but they
have an important role in cellular signaling. The third primary
effect of LLLT is localized transient heating of the absorbing chromophore based on electric or light oscillations.21 This
effect has been less characterized and it is believed to complement the other two proposed primary effects. The effect of
such oscillations appears to be more generalized and affect
all molecules in the target tissue, including water. LLLT is
able to strengthen hydrogen bonds and induce large-size
hydrogen bonds networks that allow quick energy transfers
due to resonant intermolecular energy transference. Thus,
LLLT can cause nonequilibrium electrical fluctuations that
bias Brownian motion and induce mechanisms that support
electron pumping without heat transfer.14
Secondary effects
The secondary effects of LLLT occur as a consequence
of primary effects and include a cascade of biochemical
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LLLT
NAD-NADH ratio
Mitochondrial
membrane potential
Free radicals
ATP
Calcium release
cAMP
Gene
expression
Mitogenic signals
Surface molecule
expression
Inflammation
Apoptosis
Energy metabolism
Preservation of neuronal structure and function
Improved visual function
Improved motor function
Improved cognitive function
Figure 5 The intracellular mechanisms of action of low-level light therapy (LLLT).
Photobiomodulation results in a cascade of intracellular pleiotropic effects. Light
is absorbed by chromophores in cytochrome oxidase and induces changes in its
redox state. Redox reaction of enzymes in the inner mitochondrial membrane
induces accelerated electron flow, reduced nicotine adenine dinucleotide (NADH)
consumption and increase in the mitochondrial membrane potential. These changes
facilitate the synthesis of adenosine triphosphate (ATP) and increase the generation
of free radicals. Increased ATP availability allows the activation of kinases that
induce the release of calcium and the formation of cyclic adenosine monophosphate
(cAMP). Calcium, cAMP, and free radicals act as second messengers and are able
to activate different metabolic pathways at the nuclear level. Depending on the cell
environment, these cellular changes can be adaptive and promote enhancement of
neuronal physiology that translates in clinical improvement.
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Wavelength
Dose
Effect
Relevance
Reference
He-Ne laser
632.8 nm
Schwartz et al,71
Assia et al,72
670 nm
Methanol
intoxication
Eells et al,12
GaAlAs LED
633 nm
670 nm
Lebers
hereditary optic
neuropathy
Laser-induced
retinal injury
Rojas et al,49
GaAlAs LED
GaAlAs LED
670 nm
GaAlAs LED
670 nm
ILPD
904 nm
50 mW/cm2, 20 J/cm2
in five fractions
50 mW/cm2, 360 J/cm2
in four fractions
4500 mW/cm2, 45,000
J/m2, pulsed at 3 MHz
Optic nerve
trauma
GaAlAs LED
Retinitis
pigmentosa
Light-induced
retinal damage
Age-related
macular
degeneration
Eells et al,76
Eells et al,76
Qu et al,73
Rodriguez-Santana
et al,77
Abbreviations: GaAlAs LED, Gallium-Aluminum-Arsenide light-emitting diode; He-Ne, Helium-Neon; IPLD, intense pulsed light device.
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Parkinsons disease
The protective effects of LLLT have also been demonstrated
in paradigms of neurodegeneration. Shaw et al99 showed
that LLLT has a potential application in the treatment of
Parkinsons disease. This group tested the neuroprotective
effects if LLLT in a mouse in vivo model of dopaminergic
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Table 3 Beneficial in vivo transcranial effects of low-level light therapy on the brain
Source
Wavelength
Dose
Laser
808 nm
Laser
808 nm
Laser
808 nm
Laser
808 nm
Laser
808 nm
Laser
808 nm
10 or 20 mW/cm2,
1.22.4 J/cm2, single point
for 2 minutes
LED
Laser
670 nm
Laser
1072 nm
40 mW/cm2, 2 J/cm2 in
four fractions
6 minutes 10 days
LED
810 nm
Effect
Relevance
Reference
Uozumi et al,86
Atherothrombotic
stroke
DeTaboada et al,88
Oron et al,89
Embolic stroke
Lapchak et al,90
Embolic stroke
Lapchak et al9193
Ischemic stroke
Lampl et al,94
Traumatic brain
injury (acute)
Oron et al,96
Traumatic brain
injury (chronic)
Naeser et al,97
Parkinsons disease
Shaw et al,99
Mild cognitive
impairment,
Alzheimers disease
Depression,
prefrontal functions
Michalikova
et al,104
Schiffer et al,84
Abbreviations: ATP, adenosine triphosphate; BCCAO, bilateral common carotid artery occlusion; LED, light-emitting device; MCAO, middle cerebral artery occlusion;
MPTP, 1-methyl-4-phenyl-1,2,3,6-tetrahydropyridine.
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Conclusion
LLLT or photobiomodulation refers to the use of low-power
and high-fluence light from lasers or LEDs in the red to
near-infrared wavelengths to modulate a biological function.
Cytochrome oxidase is the primary photoacceptor of LLLT
with beneficial eye and brain effects since this mitochondrial enzyme is crucial for oxidative energy metabolism,
and neurons depend on cytochrome oxidase to produce
their metabolic energy. Photon-induced redox mechanisms
in cytochrome oxidase cause other primary and secondary
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Disclosure
The authors report no conflicts of interest in this work.
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