Show Notes
In this episode, Alex Fergus sits down with Kaan from Weber Medical to explore one of the more unique light therapy products showcased at the Biohacking Congress — the Endolight, a wrist-worn laser therapy device designed to irradiate the blood through the thin skin of the wrist.
Unlike traditional red light panels or masks, the Endolight combines multiple laser wavelengths into a compact wearable designed for portability, recovery, energy support, relaxation, and potentially even athletic performance enhancement.
They also discuss Weber Medical’s infrared brain helmet, its research into PTSD and depression, and how the company is adapting medical-grade technologies into consumer-friendly biohacking devices.
Key Topics Discussed
Wrist-Based Blood Irradiation
The Endolight is designed to shine laser light through the thin skin at the wrist directly into the bloodstream. The idea is that activated blood cells circulate throughout the body, potentially supporting energy production, oxygenation, recovery, and inflammation reduction.
Multiple Wavelengths in One Device
Unlike many wearable light therapy devices that focus only on red and near-infrared, the Endolight includes:
- Red
- Infrared
- Green
- Blue
- Yellow/Amber
Each wavelength is intended for different effects, including ATP support, relaxation, oxygen transport, mood, and anti-inflammatory purposes.
A Portable Alternative to Large Panels
Alex discusses how difficult it is to travel with full-sized red light therapy panels, making compact devices like the Endolight especially attractive for frequent travelers, long flights, and busy workdays.
Athletic Performance & Recovery
Kaan shares preliminary internal testing results where users reportedly improved:
- Bench press performance
- Squatting performance
- Running endurance
The company plans to conduct larger formal trials in the future.
Laser Technology vs LEDs
The Endolight primarily uses laser diodes instead of LEDs, with only the yellow wavelength using LED technology. Weber Medical’s background comes from medical laser devices before adapting the technology for home use.
Infrared Brain Helmet
The conversation also explores Weber Medical’s infrared helmet, designed to target brain tissue using ~800nm infrared light. The company says it is being studied for:
- Brain fog
- General wellness
- PTSD
- Depression
Including ongoing work with US veterans.
Product Design & Usability
A major focus of the Endolight was making it discreet, wearable, and practical enough to use:
- During flights
- While driving
- In meetings
- At work
- During travel
The product also won a Red Dot design award.
Resources Discussed
✨ Purchase the Weber Medical Endolight, which is a portable wrist-worn multi-wavelength laser therapy device, using this link: https://aferg.co/weber
✨ Explore Weber Medical’s US website and product lineup here: https://aferg.co/weber
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