Abstract
Anxiety and depression are key barriers to healthy aging and greatly heighten the risk for many negative health issues that seriously impact life quality
This mini review examines the potential of low level laser treatments or photobiomodulation therapy for ameliorating severe anxiety and depression in older adults.
Articles that adressed the current topic of interest extracted from PUBMED and Google Scholar were carefully and presented in narrative form.
Photobiomodulation therapy appears to be a safe efficacious modality for ameliorating various degrees of anxiety and depression and for improving cognition, and is supported by several well established mechanisms of action at the molecular, cellular, and tissue levels.
More research to examine who might benefit most from this form of therapy, and in what respect in this area of growing global concern and few intervention options is strongly warranted.
Author Contributions
Copyright© 2021
Marks Ray.
License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
Competing interests The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.
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Introduction
Depression among the elderly is now considered among the leading and most disabling health challenges facing the older population, and will be the foremost disabler by 2030 This does not negate other forms of intervention that do exist, but is studied because it may fill a gap in areas where these more mainstream interventions do not help to directly alleviate the highly negative impact of various forms of persistent anxiety, which often accompanies depression, nor pathways inducing associated feelings of sadness, helplessness, loss of interest in self-care as well as pleasure in daily activities in a practical as well as possibly in an observable functional and neural context In light of the severe impact of excessive anxiety and depression as mentioned above, plus its detrimental impact on motivation, as well as health seeking and promoting behaviors, and that evidence shows many factors underpinning depression and anxiety are amenable to therapy and prevention
Materials And Methods
To attain the aims of this review, we attempted to locate salient data housed on PUBMED and GOOGLE SCHOLAR using the key terms,
Discussion
Depression and anxiety, major health issues impacting older adults negatively and significantly remain extremely challenging to eliminate. This review discusses findings concerning the possible role of photobiomodulation, a form of light therapy that utilizes non-ionizing light sources, including lasers, light emitting diodes, or broadband light to treat brain tissues, while providing a safe means of modulating brain activity without any irreversible damage in this regard
Older adults were the specific focus in this review, given the high prevalence rates of mood disorders in this group, including those with Alzheimer s disease Kerppers et al Taken as a whole, and even if studies to the contrary have not been published, in accord with Hamblin In the interim, and in line with growing evidence from multiple sources, the transcranial application of diverse forms of delivering low level laser light therapy to the prefrontal cotical region of depressed animals and humans appears to offer a consistently efficacious result as far as producing measureable favorable organic changes in the stimulated neural tissues and structures that are vital to emotional regulation and wellbeing. Furthermore, and importantly, the currently demonstrated benefits of TPBM may be expected to heighten favorable outcome expectations and thus more positive perspectives for many older adults-in general, especially in light of the unfavorable stance often accompanying the stigma of depression and anxiety, in addition to widespread ageism issues and perspectives, plus vulnerability to the use of psychotropic drugs. To further affirm and advance its clinical value, however, more comparative studies, as well as dose response and other studies assessing the degree to which TPBM can act as an effective approach for enhancing mainstream intervention approaches such as exercise, counseling, pharmacologic and stress control approaches may be insightful. Finally, in terms of cost benefit analyses, it appears the low monetary and energy costs of TPBM, along with its ease of usage might be better exploited in terms of its possible value for reducing the immense degree of suffering, as well as unwanted consequences of depression, such as cardiovascular disease Indeed, by providing hope to many, as opposed to despair, along with cost savings to elder care organizations, health policy makers, and governmental agencies, the apparent merits of TPBM should be studied sooner rather than later by all those in the health field who seek to advance elder care and raise older adults life quality, while preventing undue suffering and emotional pain in a cost-effective and safe manner. Attributes or factors and parameters that may impact or influence efficacy and outcomes in clinical and preclinical studies of TPBM that should be carefully examined in light of their possible differential effects on the quantity of light absorbed, and hence on the desired outcomes include: the degree of prevailing irradiance treatment timing and repetition pulse attributes and wavelength/light color the degree of fluence power density effects Other mediating or moderating factors that can be examined to gain further insight into the efficacy of TPBM for intervening in depression and anxiety are the characteristics of the subject, and application site s, the methods of applying the light stimuli, and the prevailing degree of emotional and neural dysfunction Successful results may also depend on the ability of the provider to personalize any recommended phototherapy application, as well as follow up plans and timely carefully construed evaluations. In the meantime, the work to date not only embodies, but is consistent with the contemporary paradigm shift away from dysregulation of single neurotransmitter systems in cases of depression towards circuit level abnormalities impacting function across multiple brain regions and neurotransmitter systems that is comparable to the actions of antidepressant medications In this regard, although ignored for many years, it appears hard to refute the idea that TPBM is a potentially effective, sustainable, safe, and compatible intervention mode for purposes of offsetting the immense suffering attributable to the presence and risk of multiple cognitive and health challenges faced by many elderly, if not all. Its optimal value too, which may yet be untapped, appears to merit considerable attention in this regard, and is strongly encouraged.