STEM-Talk

Episode 191: Francisco Gonzalez-Lima discusses methylene blue & noninvasive human brain stimulation

43 snips
Feb 2, 2026
Francisco Gonzalez-Lima, a behavioral neuroscientist at UT Austin known for work on brain energy metabolism and methylene blue. He discusses methylene blue dosing and hormesis, noninvasive infrared brain stimulation (photobiomodulation) for cognition and mood, optical measures of mitochondrial engagement, device/safety details, and plans for trials in depression, autism, ADHD and aging.
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INSIGHT

How Infrared Light Boosts Brain Energy

  • Transcranial infrared photons are absorbed by cytochrome oxidase, accelerating electron transfer to oxygen and boosting ATP while reducing harmful reactive oxygen species.
  • Eight-minute forehead stimulation produced measurable enzyme oxidation and increased local oxygenation linked to cognitive gains.
INSIGHT

NIH Workshop Validated Systemic Benefits

  • The NIH-led 'Light Buckets and Laser Beams' workshop validated photobiomodulation across labs, showing systemic benefits including improved cardiovascular metrics and longevity in animals.
  • That collective, multi-lab evidence strengthened photobiomodulation's credibility and prompted FDA interest.
ADVICE

Use Validated Devices, Prefer Correct LEDs

  • Use devices validated to lab specifications; Francisco recommends the lasers his team tested and mentions Cytom Pro as a reliable supplier.
  • Prefer LED devices with correct parameters for home use to avoid eye-safety issues from invisible lasers.
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