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#lightinduced — Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #lightinduced, aggregated by home.social.

  1. This really is worth noting!

    Turning on the light to turn off pain: This is the principle behind a new analgesic method called light-induced analgesia (LIA), discovered by scientists from the CNRS1 in rodents. Noninvasive and drug-free, LIA proves to be more effective and longer-lasting than commonly used analgesics such as ibuprofen.

    LIA relies on the direct inhibition of pain receptors. 
    #painkillers #lightinduced #veterinarymedicine #ultravioletrays

    phys.org/news/2026-01-invasive

  2. This really is worth noting!

    Turning on the light to turn off pain: This is the principle behind a new analgesic method called light-induced analgesia (LIA), discovered by scientists from the CNRS1 in rodents. Noninvasive and drug-free, LIA proves to be more effective and longer-lasting than commonly used analgesics such as ibuprofen.

    LIA relies on the direct inhibition of pain receptors. 
    #painkillers #lightinduced #veterinarymedicine #ultravioletrays

    phys.org/news/2026-01-invasive

  3. This really is worth noting!

    Turning on the light to turn off pain: This is the principle behind a new analgesic method called light-induced analgesia (LIA), discovered by scientists from the CNRS1 in rodents. Noninvasive and drug-free, LIA proves to be more effective and longer-lasting than commonly used analgesics such as ibuprofen.

    LIA relies on the direct inhibition of pain receptors. 
    #painkillers #lightinduced #veterinarymedicine #ultravioletrays

    phys.org/news/2026-01-invasive

  4. This really is worth noting!

    Turning on the light to turn off pain: This is the principle behind a new analgesic method called light-induced analgesia (LIA), discovered by scientists from the CNRS1 in rodents. Noninvasive and drug-free, LIA proves to be more effective and longer-lasting than commonly used analgesics such as ibuprofen.

    LIA relies on the direct inhibition of pain receptors. 
    #painkillers #lightinduced #veterinarymedicine #ultravioletrays

    phys.org/news/2026-01-invasive

  5. This really is worth noting!

    Turning on the light to turn off pain: This is the principle behind a new analgesic method called light-induced analgesia (LIA), discovered by scientists from the CNRS1 in rodents. Noninvasive and drug-free, LIA proves to be more effective and longer-lasting than commonly used analgesics such as ibuprofen.

    LIA relies on the direct inhibition of pain receptors. 
    #painkillers #lightinduced #veterinarymedicine #ultravioletrays

    phys.org/news/2026-01-invasive