Knee osteoarthritis / joint pain

Red light therapy for knee osteoarthritis and joint pain

Evidence on photobiomodulation and low-level laser therapy for knee osteoarthritis pain and disability.

Study count

Two cited meta-analyses include 22 placebo-controlled trials with 1,063 participants and 10 placebo-controlled trials with 542 participants.

Evidence grade

low

Panel relevance

partially-replicable

Bottom line

Knee pain evidence is promising but not plug-and-play for panels because many trials use targeted clinical lasers over joint points.

Consensus: Meta-analyses generally find pain improvements, but certainty drops when newer risk-of-bias and GRADE judgments are applied.

What the studies found

  • The 2019 BMJ Open review found significant pain reduction versus placebo at end of therapy and follow-up, with stronger effects in recommended-dose subgroups.
  • The 2024 Physical Therapy review found pain-at-rest improvement but rated the evidence as very low certainty.
  • Functional outcomes are less consistent than pain outcomes.

Dosage and timing

WavelengthsNot settled nm
IrradianceNot settled
FluenceNot settled
Session timeVaried across trials.
FrequencyVaried across trials.
DurationOften multi-session courses; no single universal protocol.
TimingNo strong time-of-day consensus.
Treatment areaKnee joint and periarticular pain points.
Device typesMostly clinical low-level laser or PBM devices.
NotesDose-response may matter; recommended-dose subgroups performed better in the 2019 BMJ Open review.
  • There is no category-wide consensus that one panel distance or session length matches clinical laser dosing.
  • Targeted application to the knee matters more than whole-body exposure.
  • Protocol conversion should be conservative because joint depth, spot size, and irradiance all affect delivered dose.

Caveats

  • Osteoarthritis is a medical condition; content should not replace diagnosis or treatment guidance.
  • Clinical laser protocols may deliver light differently than LED panels.
  • Newer reviews are more cautious than some older meta-analyses.

Cited peer-reviewed sources

meta-analysis 22 included studies Evidence: moderate; direction: positive Panel relevance: partially-replicable Wavelengths: Not reported Dose/timing: Varied by trial / Varied by trial Area: Knee joint points Device: Low-level laser therapy Source

Stausholm MB, Naterstad IF, Joensen J, et al. BMJ Open. 2019.

A placebo-controlled meta-analysis found knee osteoarthritis pain reductions, especially when studies used recommended LLLT doses.

Source

meta-analysis 10 included studies Evidence: low; direction: positive Panel relevance: partially-replicable Wavelengths: Not reported Dose/timing: Varied by trial / Varied by trial Area: Knee Device: Photobiomodulation devices, mostly clinical devices Source

Oliveira S, Andrade R, Valente C, et al. Physical Therapy. 2024.

A 2024 placebo-controlled meta-analysis found pain-at-rest improvement but rated certainty as very low.

Source

Last reviewed: 2026-06-15