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文章: Why You Should Never Wear Serums During LED Red Light Therapy

Microscopic comparison of LED light waves reflecting off a serum layer vs. penetrating deep into clean, bare skin.

Why You Should Never Wear Serums During LED Red Light Therapy

🧪 Usage Protocol · Skin Preparation

The Clean Skin Rule:
Photonic Bioavailability

How topical barriers reduce red light therapy efficacy by up to 50% — and the exact pre- and post-session protocol to maximise every photon.

📅 Updated May 2026 ✍️ Celluma Asia Clinical Team ⏱ 4 min read
Quick Answer

Always use Celluma on bare, cleansed skin. Any product on the skin surface — moisturiser, SPF, oils, serum — creates a refractive layer that scatters photons before they reach the dermis. Clinical analysis confirms this can reduce effective photon delivery by up to 50%. Double cleanse before every session. Apply serums and moisturiser after — post-session vasodilation enhances their absorption significantly.

For Photobiomodulation to achieve clinical efficacy, photons must reach the target mitochondria without interference. Every product between the LED panel and your skin introduces Refractive Index shifts that scatter, absorb, or reflect therapeutic energy before it can do its job. The solution is simple but widely ignored: treat on bare skin, apply products after.

Why Topical Products Block Red Light

Light behaves predictably when it encounters materials with different refractive indices. Skin naturally has a refractive index of approximately 1.34. Products applied to the surface create additional layers — oils, emulsions, pigments — each with their own optical properties. The photons that should be driving straight to your fibroblasts are instead scattered, reflected, and absorbed at the surface before they can penetrate.

Lipid Interference

Reflective Scattering

Oils and emollients create an uneven surface film that bounces photons away from the epidermis. The same property that makes oil-based products moisturising — their ability to sit on the surface and reduce water loss — makes them effective photon deflectors.

Mineral SPF

Total Energy Halting

Zinc Oxide and Titanium Dioxide are engineered specifically to scatter light — that is their entire function as UV filters. They scatter 640nm red and 880nm NIR wavelengths with the same efficiency. Wearing mineral SPF during a session renders treatment biologically inert.

Silicone & Film-Formers

Occlusive Barrier

Ingredients like dimethicone, cyclomethicone, and acrylate polymers form a continuous film over the skin surface. Unlike scattered photons that may partially penetrate, a continuous film creates a systematic reduction in transmittance across the entire treatment area.

Makeup & Pigments

Chromophore Absorption

Foundation, tinted moisturiser, and concealer contain pigment particles that absorb light across the visible spectrum. These particles intercept photons intended for dermal fibroblasts, absorbing the energy as heat at the surface rather than delivering it to mitochondria.

Clinical Evidence

Quantitative analysis confirms that occlusive topicals inhibit up to 50% of available photon energy (Choi et al., 2020). Optical microscopy demonstrates that 640nm and 880nm wavelengths achieve significantly higher tissue bioavailability on bare, cleansed skin compared to skin with topical products applied (Ellis & Tan, 2019). The implication: using Celluma over product-covered skin may deliver half the intended therapeutic dose — doubling the sessions needed to achieve the same clinical outcome.

What to Remove Before Your Session

Not all products are equally problematic, but all products on the skin surface reduce photon delivery to some degree. Here is exactly what must be removed before starting a Celluma session.

✗ Remove Before Session

  • All SPF — mineral or chemical
  • Foundation, BB cream, tinted moisturiser
  • Face oils and facial serums
  • Moisturisers (even lightweight ones)
  • Primer, setting spray, concealer
  • Eye cream over treatment area
  • Retinol (sensitises skin to light)
  • AHA/BHA exfoliants pre-session

✓ Safe to Have on Skin

  • Nothing — bare skin is the goal
  • Toner spritzed and fully absorbed –5min earlier
  • Thermal spring water (evaporates)
  • Plain water — no residue
  • Completely dry, product-free skin is optimal
⚠️ SPF deserves special mention: Many people apply SPF as the last step of their morning skincare routine and assume it is fine to do their Celluma session on top. It is not. Mineral SPF is physically engineered to scatter light — it does so indiscriminately, including the therapeutic wavelengths. Even chemical SPF absorbs UV energy and may interact with specific photons. Remove all SPF with a proper double cleanse before every session.

The Professional Protocol: Before, During & After

01
Double Cleanse — Remove All Barriers Before Session

Start with an oil-based cleanser or micellar water to dissolve makeup, SPF, and oil-based products. Follow immediately with a water-based cleanser to remove any remaining emulsion residue. Pat dry. Your skin is now an unobstructed canvas for photon delivery.

02
Apply Celluma on Bare, Dry Skin During Session (30 min)

Position the flexible panel in zero-gap contact with clean skin. No products. No exceptions. The panel's shape-taking design ensures maximum surface contact — this is where the Celluma's flexible panel provides a clinical advantage over rigid masks, as it maintains photon delivery consistency across curved facial anatomy without air gaps.

03
Apply Active Serums Within 20 Minutes Post-Session After Session

Red light therapy induces localised vasodilation — a temporary increase in blood flow and skin permeability in treated areas. This creates a 20–30 minute enhanced absorption window where active ingredients penetrate more deeply than they normally would. Apply Vitamin C serum, hyaluronic acid, peptides, or niacinamide immediately after the session — not before. Your post-session serums will work harder when applied to vasodilated skin.

The Post-Session Absorption Advantage

The post-session window is not widely discussed but is clinically significant. Vasodilation increases local blood flow and temporarily changes the skin's permeability characteristics. Active ingredients applied in this window penetrate more deeply and more consistently.

0 Session Ends Vasodilation is at peak. Skin is warm, flushed, and in its most receptive state for topical absorption.
20 Minute Window Apply Vitamin C, hyaluronic acid, peptides, or niacinamide now. Enhanced penetration compared to normal skin state.
30+ Mins: Moisturise Once serums are absorbed, apply moisturiser and SPF (for daytime sessions). Normal skincare routine resumes.
✅ Best serums to apply post-session: Vitamin C (L-ascorbic acid) — brightening and antioxidant protection. Hyaluronic acid — deep hydration into vasodilated tissue. Peptide serums (Argireline, Matrixyl) — collagen support when fibroblasts are already energised. Niacinamide — barrier strengthening and pore refinement. Avoid retinol immediately post-session — apply on a different schedule.
FAQ · People Also Ask

Frequently Asked Questions


Should I cleanse my skin before red light therapy?

Yes — cleansing before a Celluma session is essential, not optional. Any product on the skin surface creates a refractive layer that scatters or reflects photons before they can penetrate to the dermis. Research confirms that occlusive topicals can reduce photon delivery by up to 50%. Double cleanse: first with an oil-based cleanser to remove makeup and SPF, then with a water-based cleanser to clear residue. Start your session on bare, dry skin.

Can I use red light therapy with moisturiser on?

No. Moisturisers — particularly those containing oils, emollients, or occlusive ingredients like petrolatum, dimethicone, or shea butter — create a film that acts as a refractive barrier. This scatters photons, reducing the effective dose reaching your fibroblasts. Apply moisturiser after the session instead — post-session vasodilation significantly improves topical ingredient absorption anyway.

Does SPF or sunscreen block red light therapy?

Yes — completely. Mineral SPF ingredients (Zinc Oxide, Titanium Dioxide) are engineered to scatter light across the visible spectrum, including the 640nm red and 880nm near-infrared used in Celluma sessions. Wearing SPF during a session renders the treatment biologically inert in those areas. Always double cleanse to remove all SPF before starting your session — even if you only applied it that morning.

What should I put on my face after red light therapy?

Apply active serums immediately after your Celluma session: Vitamin C (brightening and antioxidant), hyaluronic acid (deep hydration), peptides (collagen support), or niacinamide (barrier strengthening). Red light therapy induces localised vasodilation, creating a 20–30 minute enhanced absorption window. Ingredients applied in this window penetrate more deeply and work more effectively than when applied to normal-state skin.

Can I do red light therapy after applying retinol?

No — do not apply retinol before a Celluma session. Retinol temporarily sensitises the skin to light and can increase the risk of irritation when combined with LED therapy. If your routine includes retinol, keep the two applications separate: Celluma session on one schedule, retinol as a standalone evening step with at least 30 minutes separation. Or apply retinol at night and do your Celluma session in the morning.

How long before red light therapy should I cleanse?

Cleanse immediately before your Celluma session, not hours earlier. Skin continuously produces sebum, and environmental pollutants settle on the surface throughout the day. Cleansing more than 30–60 minutes before your session means the skin is no longer bare by the time you apply the device. Ideal sequence: Cleanse → pat dry → start Celluma session → apply serums post-session.

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Academic References:
Choi, S.Y., et al. (2020). Occlusive substances & phototherapy efficacy. Journal of Dermatological Science.
Ellis, D., & Tan, J. (2019). Phototherapy penetration depth analysis. Dermatologic Surgery.

© 2026 Celluma Asia | Clinical Phototherapy & Dermal Science

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