From beds to LED masks, is the red light craze giving us more than just a warm glow?
From beds to LED masks, is the red light craze giving us more than just a warm glow? At first glance, it reminds me of a tanning bed I used to cook myself on as a naive teenager (which I heartily do not recommend). But I'm reassured I won't be turning a crisp brown.
"It's red light," Dr Cal Shields explains.
"This is going to repair cells - not fry them. "Just 15 minutes," he says, as he closes the lid of the red light therapy bed and leaves the room in Thriyv, a wellness suite in Manchester. There's a distant whirr, the bed glows and I'm left alone with my thoughts - and supposedly some hastily repairing skin and muscle cells. Over the past few months, the wellbeing industry has been turning red. Whether you want to look younger, live longer, feel happier, or recover more quickly, it's being claimed red light therapy is the way to go. But what is red light therapy, and can the warm scarlet hues beaming out of red therapy mats, LED masks and sauna sleeping bags really boost our health?
Red light therapy impacts the body using different wavelengths.
Red light is what we can see with the naked eye, with wavelengths measuring between 630–660 nanometres - that's millionths of a millimetre. As the wavelengths get longer, the light starts to become invisible. The longer the wavelength, the deeper it reaches in the body.
Depending on wavelength and intensity, these little red light particles can speed up energy production in cells and help damaged cells repair and reproduce. Back at Thriyv, one of Dr Shields's regular clients, Kate McLelland, jumps off a red light therapy bed.
Red light is still a part of her recovery routine. "It used to take me a week to recover from Hyrox," she says. "Now it's just a few days. "
McLelland is such a fan, she also has an LED face mask.
These sell for hundreds of pounds, if not thousands, with manufacturers claiming that use of red light stimulates collagen production and reduces fine lines.
"My skin does feel like it's got more of a glow," McLelland says. "I had a lot of sun damage, but I can see that's definitely lifted. " So how effective are the red light devices you can find on the market?
Here's how you can get your dose of red light therapy: Red light masks These use mostly visible red light and some longer wavelengths. Weatherhead says the thickness of the skin affects how well red light can penetrate.
But, she stresses, it depends if there is enough power from the device.
It also depends on where the red light is coming from.
Home devices, she says, may be less effective than medical grade ones.
Red light therapy beds These use some visible red light but more longer near-infrared wavelengths.
Prof Jeffery, the UCL neuroscientist, says his studies show that near-infrared light can penetrate right through the body - so the light could reach deeper tissues.
He adds it's very difficult to judge how much red light skin needs, and it differs from person to person.
Infrared saunas These use much longer wavelengths than beds and masks. Instead of targeting the powerhouse of the cell - the mitochondria - like red light therapy beds and LED masks, the main benefits come from their heat. The molecules in the cells that respond to heat stress become energised, which Prof Chris Minson, a physiologist from the University of Oregon, says can have a multitude of benefits, including reducing inflammation and "sweeping up damaged proteins" - which can help the cell to repair itself.
For Eloise Alexia, who teaches yoga and pilates at a wellness hub in London, the infrared light in her studio provides something other heat can't.
"My clients love it," Alexia says.
"The infrared is more targeted, it heats their bodies rather than just the air around them, and helps warm them up more quickly. "They also don't get as exhausted as quickly as they would do with normal heat. "
Experts recommend against overuse, and to follow manufacturer's guidance. They also recommend wearing eye protection and advise making sure devices have the CE or UKCA product safety mark. Back at the wellness suite, I put the lack of clinical evidence for red light therapy beds to the medical director. Until recently, Shields was an NHS doctor, using treatments that had been rigorously tested in a world of randomised controlled trials. So it's quite a change for him.
"But that's not to say we won't have the evidence in the future
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