Photobiomodulation (PBM)
Photobiomodulation (PBM) is the non-thermal use of 600–1000nm light to modulate cellular metabolism. Photons hit cytochrome c oxidase, photodissociate inhibitory nitric oxide, restore ATP synthesis. Over 5,000 peer-reviewed studies across 42 years. Angel Acid builds on the mechanism WALT formally adopted — engineered for the periorbital dose window of 1–8 J/cm².
About this topic
Photobiomodulation (PBM) is the non-thermal, non-ionizing application of light energy to biological tissue to modulate cellular metabolism. The primary mechanism involves photon absorption by cytochrome c oxidase (Complex IV) in the electron transport chain, photodissociating inhibitory nitric oxide and immediately restoring ATP synthesis. The term was formally adopted by the World Association for Photobiomodulation Therapy (WALT) to replace the older designation "low-level laser therapy" (LLLT), reflecting that both laser and non-coherent LED sources produce equivalent therapeutic effects at matched parameters. Over 5,000 peer-reviewed studies have investigated PBM across dermatology, neurology, pain management, and wound healing. The biphasic dose response (Arndt-Schulz law) defines the therapeutic window at 1–8 J/cm² per session.
Articles in this cluster
The 660nm Paradox: Why Wavelength Precision Changes Everything
New peer-reviewed research reveals why even 10nm of wavelength drift can reduce photobiomodulation efficacy by up to 40%. Inside the engineering obsession that defines Angel Acid.
Collagen Synthesis and Red Light Therapy: What the Evidence Says
A systematic review of the clinical evidence for photobiomodulation-induced collagen production, with implications for periorbital skin rejuvenation.
NIR Light and Mitochondrial Rescue in Periorbital Tissue
850nm near-infrared penetrates the orbital bone to reach mitochondria in ways topical serums never could.
Is Red Light Therapy Safe? A Comprehensive Evidence Review
Examining 42 years of photobiomodulation research to answer the most important question: what are the risks?
Related studies
- Karu 2010review · bronze
Mechanism — cytochrome c oxidase pathway confirmed.
Karu TI. "Multiple roles of cytochrome c oxidase in mammalian cells under action of red and IR-A radiation." IUBMB Life. 2010;62(8):607-10.
- Hamblin 2017review · bronze
Anti-inflammatory — reduces TNF-α, IL-1β, IL-6.
Hamblin MR. "Mechanisms and applications of the anti-inflammatory effects of photobiomodulation." AIMS Biophys. 2017;4(3):337-361.
- Avci et al. 2013meta-analysis · bronze
700+ — citations — most-cited LLLT review in dermatology.
Avci P, et al. "Low-level laser (light) therapy (LLLT) in skin: stimulating, healing, restoring." Semin Cutan Med Surg. 2013;32(1):41-52.
- Ngoc et al. 2023meta-analysis · bronze
554 — articles screened in comprehensive meta-analysis.
Ngoc LTN, et al. "LED phototherapy for skin rejuvenation: a systematic review and meta-analysis." Photodermatol Photoimmunol Photomed. 2023.