From the Journals

Noninvasive laser therapy tied to improved short-term memory


 

FROM SCIENCE ADVANCES

Beneficial cognitive, emotional effects

Commenting for this news organization, Francisco Gonzalez-Lima, PhD, professor in the department of psychology, University of Texas at Austin, called the study “well done.”

Dr. Gonzalez-Lima was one of the first researchers to demonstrate that 1,064 nm transcranial infrared laser stimulation “produces beneficial cognitive and emotional effects in humans, including improving visual working memory,” he said.

The current study “reported an additional brain effect linked to the improved visual working memory that consists of an EEG-derived response, which is a new finding,” noted Dr. Gonzales-Lima, who was not involved with the new research.

He added that the same laser method “has been found by the Gonzalez-Lima lab to be effective at improving cognition in older adults and depressed and bipolar patients.”

The study was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China, the Ministry of Science and Technology of the People’s Republic of China, and the National Defence Basic Scientific Research Program of China. The investigators and Dr. Gonzalez-Lima report no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

Pages

Recommended Reading

Mind the geriatrician gap
MDedge Family Medicine
Does dopamine dysregulation cause schizophrenia?
MDedge Family Medicine
More evidence in utero exposure to antiseizure meds safe for children’s cognition
MDedge Family Medicine
No, you can’t see a different doctor: We need zero tolerance of patient bias
MDedge Family Medicine
How your voice could reveal hidden disease
MDedge Family Medicine
Statins tied to lower ICH risk regardless of bleed location
MDedge Family Medicine
A single pediatric CT scan raises brain cancer risk
MDedge Family Medicine
SSRI tied to improved cognition in comorbid depression, dementia
MDedge Family Medicine
‘Striking’ rate of mental health comorbidities in epilepsy
MDedge Family Medicine
There are new things we can do to improve early autism detection
MDedge Family Medicine