Bell's palsy / facial palsy
Laser therapy for Bell's palsy
Meta-analysis evidence on laser therapy and photobiomodulation for Bell's palsy/facial palsy.
Study count
The cited meta-analysis included 12 randomized studies with 597 patients; nine entered quantitative analysis.
Evidence grade
low
Panel relevance
not-panel-replicable
Bottom line
This category should be clinician-focused and should not suggest self-treatment with face panels.
Consensus: A positive signal exists for clinician-delivered laser therapy, but Bell's palsy remains a medical condition needing prompt evaluation.
What the studies found
- Laser therapy improved House-Brackmann severity, Sunnybrook facial grading, and facial disability outcomes versus control care.
- Laser therapy also improved facial severity compared with electrical stimulation.
- The evidence is promising but should remain clinician-directed.
Dosage and timing
| Wavelengths | Not settled nm |
|---|---|
| Irradiance | Not settled |
| Fluence | Not settled |
| Session time | Clinical protocol-specific. |
| Frequency | Clinical protocol-specific. |
| Duration | Varied by trial. |
| Timing | Treatment timing relative to onset likely matters but is not resolved for consumer guidance. |
| Treatment area | Facial nerve/muscle targets. |
| Device types | Clinical laser therapy / PBM. |
| Notes | No adverse effects were reported in the meta-analysis. |
- No home-panel protocol.
- Clinical diagnosis and early medical management are central.
- Do not provide DIY facial nerve dosing.
Caveats
- Facial weakness can have urgent causes, including stroke.
- Bell's palsy needs medical evaluation.
Cited peer-reviewed sources
Lin HW, Chen HC, Lin LF, et al. Lasers in Medical Science. 2024.
A 2024 meta-analysis reported favorable effects of laser therapy on Bell's palsy severity, facial asymmetry, and function.
Last reviewed: 2026-06-15