So ask your competent? doctor how this intervention helps the brain. Doesn't know? You don't have a functioning stroke doctor!
Photo-neuro-immuno-endocrinology: How the ultraviolet radiation regulates the body, brain, and immune system
Edited by Lawrence Steinman, Stanford University, Stanford, CA; received October 25, 2023; accepted February 6, 2024
Abstract
Ultraviolet
radiation (UVR) is primarily recognized for its detrimental effects
such as cancerogenesis, skin aging, eye damage, and autoimmune
disorders. With exception of ultraviolet B (UVB) requirement in the
production of vitamin D3, the positive role of UVR in modulation of
homeostasis is underappreciated. Skin exposure to UVR triggers local
responses secondary to the induction of chemical, hormonal, immune, and
neural signals that are defined by the chromophores and extent of UVR
penetration into skin compartments. These responses are not random and
are coordinated by the cutaneous neuro-immuno-endocrine system, which
counteracts the action of external stressors and accommodates local
homeostasis to the changing environment. The UVR induces electrical,
chemical, and biological signals to be sent to the brain, endocrine and
immune systems, as well as other central organs, which in concert
regulate body homeostasis. To achieve its central homeostatic goal, the
UVR-induced signals are precisely computed locally with transmission
through nerves or humoral signals release into the circulation to
activate and/or modulate coordinating central centers or organs. Such
modulatory effects will be dependent on UVA and UVB wavelengths. This
leads to immunosuppression, the activation of brain and endocrine
coordinating centers, and the modification of different organ functions.
Therefore, it is imperative to understand the underlying mechanisms of
UVR electromagnetic energy penetration deep into the body, with its
impact on the brain and internal organs.
Photo-neuro-immuno-endocrinology can offer novel therapeutic approaches
in addiction and mood disorders; autoimmune, neurodegenerative, and
chronic pain-generating disorders; or pathologies involving endocrine,
cardiovascular, gastrointestinal, or reproductive systems.
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