The Energy Code

Shining Light on the Brain: Can Transcranial PBM Boost Athletic Performance — or Is It Mostly Hype?

Mar 16, 2026
A deep dive into transcranial photobiomodulation and why red/NIR light over the scalp is gaining traction in performance circles. Short review of the tiny, mixed evidence base and why inconsistent protocols limit conclusions. Clear rundown of proposed mechanisms like mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidase, nitric oxide, and calcium signaling. Practical cautions on safety, placebo risk, and treating the tech as a complement to sleep and training.
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INSIGHT

How tPBM Is Supposed To Work

  • Transcranial photobiomodulation (tPBM) uses red/NIR light to non‑thermally modulate brain mitochondria and networks.
  • Key target is cytochrome c oxidase boosting ATP, plus nitric oxide displacement and calcium signaling driving plasticity.
INSIGHT

The Brain As A Performance Lever

  • The brain is a primary performance organ influencing reaction time, decision making, and motor planning.
  • Improving CNS energy, blood flow, or inflammation could translate to better sport outcomes like timing and attention.
INSIGHT

The Evidence Base Is Very Small

  • Evidence base in sports is tiny: the review included seven studies (five human, two animal) with major design limits.
  • Only one human study was double‑blind sham‑controlled and it showed no clear benefit after adjustments.
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