This is Mike replying.
You can use 470 nm blue led light on tumors. It only penetrates about
1 mm at this wavelength. This would be good for skin cancers and
maybe some skin mets or very superficial tumors. I think it is worth
trying. Don't use the red or near infrared. Those wavelenghths
penetrate deepr, but may (possibly) stimulate cell growth.
The dental lights come in a range of wavelengths between 420 and 500
nm, so the 470 nm led arrays (blue) would be right in that range.
Mike
Monday, June 30, 2008, 4:37:58 AM, you wrote:
TW> On Jun 29, 2008, at 11:07 AM, jm92562 wrote:
>> http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2008/06/080624110831.htm
TW> Jenny- thanks so much for posting this, I was feeling bad about using
TW> LED's on my husband's growths. My LED array has blue, red, and
TW> infrared. Would it be better to only use the blue light and not the
TW> red and infrared? They have separate switches. One article suggested
TW> that infrared could promote angiogenesis. I need more information
TW> since an article about infrared saunas said they would decrease cancer
TW> growth.
TW> Nancy
--
Best regards,
goldenmike mailto:goldenmike@sbcglobal.net
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