Pressure ulcers
Red light therapy for pressure ulcers
Evidence on low-level laser therapy for pressure ulcers in randomized clinical studies.
Study count
The cited systematic review included only four randomized studies.
Evidence grade
very-low
Panel relevance
not-panel-replicable
Bottom line
Pressure ulcers belong in medical wound-care content, not self-treatment panel advice.
Consensus: Evidence is too small for strong claims; one 658 nm study was positive, but broader wavelength/probe evidence is weak.
What the studies found
- Only four randomized studies were included.
- One 658 nm study reported 71% pressure-ulcer reduction and 47% complete healing after 1 month.
- The review found no evidence for wavelengths above 658 nm or cluster-probe use.
Dosage and timing
| Wavelengths | 658, 808, 904, 940 nm |
|---|---|
| Irradiance | Not settled |
| Fluence | Not settled |
| Session time | Clinical wound protocol-specific. |
| Frequency | Clinical wound protocol-specific. |
| Duration | One positive study assessed 1 month of therapy. |
| Timing | Wound-care schedule-specific. |
| Treatment area | Pressure ulcers. |
| Device types | Clinical low-level laser therapy. |
| Notes | Only 658 nm had significant evidence in the cited review. |
- No consumer protocol.
- Wound status, infection risk, pressure offloading, nutrition, and medical care dominate protocol decisions.
- Do not translate these findings to wellness panel use.
Caveats
- Pressure ulcers can become serious infections and require medical care.
- Light therapy cannot replace pressure relief, wound cleaning, infection management, or clinician oversight.
Cited peer-reviewed sources
meta-analysis
LLLT for pressure ulcers systematic review
Machado RS, Viana S, Sbruzzi G. Lasers in Medical Science. 2017.
A pressure-ulcer review found limited randomized evidence, with one 658 nm study showing significant ulcer reduction.
Last reviewed: 2026-06-15