Carpal tunnel syndrome

Red light therapy for carpal tunnel syndrome

Evidence from systematic reviews and meta-analyses on low-level laser therapy for carpal tunnel syndrome.

Study count

Cited reviews include six RCTs with 418 patients and eight RCTs with 473 patients / 631 wrists.

Evidence grade

low

Panel relevance

partially-replicable

Bottom line

Carpal tunnel should be framed as weak evidence for targeted clinical LLLT, not a consumer panel protocol.

Consensus: Carpal tunnel evidence is mixed and does not support strong claims; some outcomes improve, but pain/function superiority is not consistent.

What the studies found

  • A 2020 network meta-analysis found limited added benefit over splinting and did not recommend LLLT addition.
  • A 2017 meta-analysis found grip-strength improvement but not pain, symptom severity, or functional-status improvement.
  • Overall direction is mixed and outcome-dependent.

Dosage and timing

WavelengthsNot settled nm
IrradianceNot settled
FluenceNot settled
Session timeVaried across trials.
FrequencyVaried across trials.
DurationVaried across trials.
TimingNo time-of-day consensus.
Treatment areaWrist/carpal tunnel region.
Device typesClinical LLLT, often alongside splinting.
NotesSplinting remains a common comparator and first-line conservative context.
  • No clear panel protocol emerges.
  • If discussed, the protocol should be targeted wrist treatment, not whole-body exposure.
  • Clinical evaluation matters because carpal tunnel involves nerve compression.

Caveats

  • Numbness, weakness, or progressive symptoms need medical evaluation.
  • Evidence does not justify replacing splinting or clinician-guided care.

Cited peer-reviewed sources

meta-analysis 6 included studies Evidence: low; direction: no-clear-effect Panel relevance: partially-replicable Wavelengths: Not reported Dose/timing: Varied by trial / Varied by trial Area: Wrist/carpal tunnel region Device: LLLT used with splinting Source

Cheung WKW, Wu IXY, Sit RWS, et al. Physiotherapy. 2020.

A network meta-analysis concluded LLLT plus splinting offered limited extra benefit and was not recommended for carpal tunnel syndrome management.

Source

meta-analysis 8 included studies Evidence: low; direction: mixed Panel relevance: partially-replicable Wavelengths: Not reported Dose/timing: Varied by trial / Varied by trial Area: Wrist/carpal tunnel region Device: Low-level laser therapy with or without splinting Source

Bekhet AH, Ragab B, Abushouk AI, et al. Lasers in Medical Science. 2017.

A meta-analysis found grip-strength improvement but no significant pain, symptom severity, or functional-status advantage over placebo.

Source

Last reviewed: 2026-06-15