Conventional and Holistic Medicine, Dentistry and Surgery for Small Animals

What is Laser Therapy?

Laser Therapy (LT) is a form of rehabilitation therapy that uses a warm beam of focused light to promote tissue/cell healing as well as function. LT can be used to help wounds heal, reduce pain and inflammation, improve nerve function, increase blood flow, and has several other benefits as well.

 

1. Anti-Inflammation

LT has an anti-edema effect as it causes vasodilation, but also because it activates the lymphatic drainage system (drains swollen areas). As a result there is a reduction in swelling caused by bruising or inflammation.

2. Anti-Pain (Analgesic)

LT has a high beneficial effect on nerve cells which block pain transmitted by these cells to the brain and which decreases nerve sensitivity. Also, due to less inflammation, there is less edema and less pain. Another pain blocking mechanism involves the production of high levels of pain killing chemicals such as endorphins and enkephlins from the brain and adrenal gland.

3. Accelerated Tissue Repair and Cell Growth

Photons of light from lasers penetrate deeply into tissue and accelerate cellular reproduction and growth. The laser light increases the energy available to the cell so that the cell can take on nutrients faster and get rid of waste products. As a result of exposure to laser light, the cells of tendons, ligaments and muscles are repaired faster.

4. Improved Vascular Activity

Laser light will significantly increase the formation of new capillaries in damaged tissue that speeds up the healing process, closes wounds quickly and reduces scar tissue. Additional benefits include acceleration of angiogenesis, which causes temporary vasodilatation, and increase in the diameter of blood vessels.

5. Increase Metabolic Activity

LT creates higher outputs of specific enzymes, greater oxygen and food particle loads for blood cells.

6. Trigger Points and Acupuncture Points

LT stimulates muscle trigger points and acupuncture points on a non-invasive basis providing musculoskeletal relief.

7. Reduced Fibrous Tissue Formation

LT reduces the formation of scar tissue following tissue damage from cuts, scratches, burns, or surgery.

8. Inprove Nerve Function

Slow recovery of nerve functions in damaged tissue can result in numbness and impaired limbs. Laser light will speed up the process of nerve cell reconnection and increase the amplitude of action potentials to optimize muscle action.

9. Immunoregulation

Laser light has a direct effect on immunity status by stimulation of immunoglobines and lymphocytes. LT is absorbed by chromophores (molecule enzymes) that react to laser light. The enzyme flavomononucleotide is activated and starts the production of ATP (adenosine-tri-phosphate), which is the major carrier of cell energy and the energy source for all chemical reactions in the cells.

10. Faster Wound Healing

Laser light stimulates fibroblast development (fibroblasts are the building blocks of collagen, which is predominant in wound healing) in damaged tissue. Collagen is the essential protein required to replace old tissue or to repair tissue injuries. As a result, LT is effective on open wounds and burns.