$3791
$7000+
$2495

Perfect example of information the sales people won’t be telling you about…

http://www.fda.gov/ICECI/EnforcementActions/WarningLetters/ucm286805.htm

Keep in mind that a $40 laser pointer has more power and is rated as a Class 3a with CDRH – FDA. This is like taking baby aspirin for a migraine..The MultiRadiance lasers are over the counter cleared which means its the weakest power you can find. It’s like finding a medicine so weak that you can leave it laying around for your kids to play Doctor with.

This company is known for making the Terraquant model series and now MR4Activ (more of the same).

If you are Activ-ly looking for an overly expensive OTC laser..then look no further. Consumers give it three thumbs down. Contact me to learn more.

 

MultiRadiance Lasers:  TechnoBabble, Misleading Language and Bogus Science
1)  MultiRadiance use many ploys to market their lasers including the use of techno-babble, wherein make-believe technical sounding terms are used to impress the non-technical reader. Techno-babble attempts to draw the reader’s attention away from the real science and focus on nonsensical but important sounding terms and ideas.

 2)  The Company uses advertising and labels that include scientific-sounding explanations that use terms that are misleading.

3)  The Company cannot provide Clinical Studies OR Independent Testing – to VALIDATE – OR PROVE  – any of their Claims below; which means they are actually promoting bogus science.

4)  The number one reason these lasers are sold is because of price and incredible marketing.

 

CLAIMS:

 

Super Pulsed Laser

The super pulsed laser (905nm) produces high powered light in billionth-of-a-second pulses. The power of each pulse drives the photons, or light energy up to 10—13cm (4—5 inches) deep into the target tissue. Multi Radiance Medical’s technology’s power of up to 50,000mW creates a high photon density, strongly reducing pain and improving micro-circulation.

 

The Multi Radiance Cascade Energy Effect™ and LaserSweep™.

 

The Multi Radiance Cascade Energy Effect™ uses a sophisticated software algorithm to synergize multiple wavelengths that allows for tissue penetration at different levels.

The Cascade Energy Effect™—triple synchronized wavelengths

 

LaserSweep™ changes the number of pulses emitted per second to scan target tissue from superficial to deep, preventing bodily adaptation and resilience to its treatment effects

 

 What is Multi Radiance Super Pulsed Laser?

  • Highest photon density without hazardous thermal impact to tissue
  • Higher peak power with greatest degree of safety of any laser available
  • Delivers controlled light energy deep into tissue more effectively than Continuous Wave and pulsed-modulated lasers while preserving the overlying epidermis
  • Allows unique control of depth/power of laser energy

 

 

 

Check out this article written by well respected researchers in the industry. They also wrote one of the best laser books that compiles all the studies and research done with lasers called The New Laser Therapy Handbook. Here is what they say about super pulsing..

Pulsing and Super Pulsing: A Commentary
By Jan Tunér, DDS
Lars Hode, DrSci (Swedish Laser Medical Society)

Pulsing

There are principally two types of pulsing in laser phototherapy
• chopped (switched) or
• super pulsed

A chopped beam is a continuous beam that is electronically (or mechanically) switched between on and off.

During the moments when it is on it has typically the same output power as in continuous mode, but as it is not on all the time, the average output power is less than when it is continuous.

The average power is a function of the continuous wave power and the duty cycle (the ratio of the “on” time of the beam to the total emission (“on” + “off”) time, usually expressed as a percentage).

Typical laser types are most of the gas lasers (such as the HeNe laser) and all
semiconductor (diode) lasers (except the GaAs laser). The GaAs laser was the first semiconductor laser in the world. In order to generate laser light, the current density in the GaAs semiconductor crystal had to be extremely high. As a consequence of the high electric current the output power of this semiconductor laser is very high.

Typical peak power is in the order of many watts. However, when an electric current is conducted through a material heat is generated, and with the necessary high current in this laser the crystal will burn up immediately unless the time of current conduction is extremely short, i.e., super-pulsed GaAs lasers cannot work continuously.

The maximal pulse time for this laser is in the order of 100 to 200 nanoseconds and, after each such pulse, a long cooling time is needed, usually about a thousand times longer than said pulse time.

This form of pulsing is called super pulsing and, although the peak power is very high, the average output of super-pulsed lasers is comparatively low. Typically the GaAs laser produces its maximum emission at 904 nm.

What About Average Power Output

Restating the above, even though the peak power of the super-pulsed GaAs laser may be very high, it lasts for an extremely short time compared to the pulse cycle, resulting in an average output power that is usually a thousand times lower than the peak power. For clinical use, it is the average power that counts.

The energy (dose) delivered from pulsed lasers is always the average output power multiplied by the exposure time. The average power is the important output of the laser.

Some manufacturers prefer to label these lasers as “very strong” and state only the peak power which then can be in the order of 100 watts.

This sounds impressive, but typically these lasers emit 10-100 mW average power, and this is what counts for the treatment.

The GaAs lasers are quite useful in physiotherapy, but care has to be taken.

In some super-pulsed lasers the average output changes with the set pulse frequency, so that low pulse repetition rates deliver very low average outputs.

This means that with such lasers, with low frequency settings, the treatment time may be impractically long in order to deliver a reasonable dose.

A Serious Problem

One manufacturer, for example, promotes its super-pulsed lasers as having 25,000 mW or 50,000 mW of power, and offers the user a small number of preset ‘programs’ which, essentially, only adjust the pulse frequency and, therefore, the average output power. One of these ‘programs’ sets a frequency of 5 Hz.

To calculate the average power one must only know the Peak Power, the Pulse Frequency and the Pulse Duration.

As mentioned previously, the pulse duration (i.e., the ‘width’ of each pulse of energy) of most GaAs devices is 100-200 nanoseconds (0.0000001 – 0.0000002 sec).

If we use the manufacturer’s ‘highest’ power option (50,000 mW), select their 5 Hz program, and assume the longest possible pulse duration (0.0000002 sec) for our calculation, we arrive at an Average Output Power of only 0.050 mW, or fifty millionths of one Watt.

With this very low average power it will take twenty thousand seconds (5.6 hours) for this manufacturer’s laser to deliver one Joule. Impractically long, perhaps?

Other super-pulsed lasers employ “pulse trains”, which enable the average output to be maintained at a constant level over all frequencies. The importance of checking upon this is obvious when it comes to acquiring a GaAs laser.

False Super Pulsing

One manufacturer claims that its dual-wavelength (800 nm and 970 nm) high-powered Class IV laser has better penetration due to its ‘Intense Super Pulse’ emission.

However, these diode lasers are not super pulsed, they are “chopped”, and chopping does not offer increased penetration.

In this case chopping the output simply reduces the tissue-heating effect of the high power laser by both reducing the average power and also allowing time for the tissue to thermally relax (i.e., dissipate heat) between each pulse of light.

Frequencies
The biological differences between super-pulsed and chopped emissions are likely to be
fundamental. Is pulsing then of interest? The in vitro studies by e.g. Tiina Karu clearly show that the type of pulsing is of importance. However, in these situations one type of cell and one type of reaction is studied. In the clinical situation, many types of cells are irradiated and a multitude of events happen. So is pulsing then of any clinical importance?

The answer is that we do not know. This is well presented in the recent literature review by Hashmi et al, http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20662021.

Some lasers are pulsed to allow for heat dissipation, but that has nothing to do with biostimulation. Chopping is an option in some continuous lasers and users should be aware of the fact that suggested pulse repetition rates are only setting options; we do not know if the different pulse repetition rates provide different biological results.

Many “recommended” frequencies employed in therapeutic lasers are, in fact, carried over from other fields and modalities, especially electrical stimulation.

Nogier’s frequencies, for example, are often incorporated into laser therapy protocols for both humans and animals; yet their original application was in humans only, specifically auricular therapy delivered by electrical stimulation.

Due largely to the impact of pulse frequency upon the average power of the first therapeutic diode laser, the GaAs, Nogier’s original frequencies (there are seven, ranging from 1.14 Hz to 146 Hz) are even presented at a higher “harmonic” so as to achieve a higher average output power, further increasing the disparity between their original intended application and their current use.

Despite this, and the fact that there have been no studies undertaken to compare or confirm the efficacy of the original or higher-harmonic laser-delivered frequencies in humans or animals, these and other frequencies are provided as an integral part of many different therapeutic laser devices and their pre-programmed protocols.