Photodynamic therapy

Photodynamic therapy

PHOTODYNAMIC THERAPY acts as a link between classical therapy and biological therapy. Photodynamic therapy (FDT) is an antiproliferative biological treatment method that has been around for over 100 years.
This method is based on the collection of a special photosensor - a very light-sensitive substance (radachlorinated, dysfunctional, inflamed and atypical cells) and the effect of laser light on these cells.
The drug radhachlorin, which has been used for a long time in developed European countries, was obtained from seaweed. Unhealthy cells, where the photosensitive substance (radachlorin) accumulates, absorb laser light of a locally determined length of 654-680 nM. Under the influence of the laser, a photodynamic reaction is activated in damaged cells that have absorbed radhachlorin, and singlet active form oxygen is formed. These singlets 02 or oxygen-carrying free radicals stop the pathological process, causing atypical cells to undergo apoptosis.
So how does PDT work?
Anti-inflammatory - Antitumor (activates anti-tumor non-regenerative specific immunity)
Painkiller - eliminates pathological angiogenesis
Immunomodulatory - has an antiallergic effect.




INDICATION:
Arthritis, arthrosis
Systemic diseases:
Rheumatoid arthritis - Miegelosis
Bekhterev sick smell - Systemic urticaria
Deformative spondylosis - Vasculitis
Degenerative-dystrophic diseases, osteochondrosis, intervertebral disc herniation, traumatic injury of vertebrae
Degenerative-dystrophic and traumatic injuries of joints
Degenerative-dystrophic diseases and trauma of bones, muscles, ligaments
After surgery, as well as after arthroscopy, endoprosthesis of joints and vertebrae
Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis
Chronic and viral hepatitis
Prostatadenoma, chronic cystitis, pyelonephritis
Vitiligo, psoriasis and other skin diseases
Trophic ulcer or other wounds (which cannot regenerate for a long time)