RedMed - Red Light Therapy icon

RedMed - Red Light Therapy

1.01 for Android
4.1 | 10,000+ Installs | Reviews

Vedic Society

Description of RedMed - Red Light Therapy

RedMed allows you to generate red light on your device's screen for a specific duration at a preferred pulse (from 0 to 30 Hz) at the maximum brightness of your display.
Red light has been shown to have a therapeutic effect,
some studies show a heightened effect when the light is pulsed rather than static. 10 Hz is a good starting point for pulsing.
The software enables you to turn off all the devices radio hardware (enable airplane mode) as well as mute the audio to enhance the therapeutic effect without any disturbance.
When cells are exposed to red light the production of ATP (adenosine triphosphate) increases along with ROS (reactive oxygen species) and NO (nitric oxide). All of these factors aid cellular repair.
Important Note: Pulsing light is not suitable for photosensitive epileptics.
DISCLAIMER: NOT FOR MEDICAL USE RedMed is not intended to prevent or treat any condition, or to be a substitute for professional medical care. RedMed has not been cleared or approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration.

Information

  • Category:
    Health & Fitness
  • Latest Version:
    1.01
  • Updated:
    2016-10-19
  • File size:
    510.0KB
  • Requirements:
    Android 2.2 or later
  • Developer:
    Vedic Society
  • ID:
    com.martin.redmed
  • Available on:
Reviews
  • avatar
    Not likely mobile devices can emit very much, if any, 670nm. The gamut is too narrow. Typical LCD display red wavelengths are very attenuated by about 610nm. Also, the light intensity here is way too low. Unlikely to be therapeutic at all.
    2020-08-22 10:21
  • avatar
    I do like it and it would be a great app but the screen flashed red light keep blinking and saying it wouldn't fit in my screen
    2020-08-15 01:11
  • avatar
    Works as described. Would be nice if you could tweak the wavelength.
    2020-07-21 10:20
  • avatar
    Good idea. Some suggestions, don't change screen brightness until user presses go. Let user input specific freq. E.g 7.83 Hz and enable pulsing screen brightness by a certain % rather than just on-off.
    2020-07-19 04:31
  • avatar
    If this red light really is 650nm, which is not far from 670nm the very hot, trendy, eye-benefiting wavelength that news are touting everywhere recently, then it's godsend. Keep up the good work.
    2020-07-08 12:59
  • avatar
    Can you please add a 670nm red for improving eye sight?
    2020-07-03 03:50