THERAPEUTIC ULTRASOUND THERAPY

OPERATING PROCEDURE


1. Introduction

Therapeutic Ultrasound (US) is a deep-heating and mechanotherapeutic modality that employs high-frequency acoustic energy (typically 1–3 MHz) to induce thermal and non-thermal effects in biological tissues. It is widely used in physiotherapy to reduce pain, improve tissue extensibility, accelerate soft-tissue healing, and facilitate functional recovery when integrated with exercise and manual therapy.

Ultrasound’s clinical value depends on accurate parameter selection, precise application technique, appropriate coupling, and vigilant monitoring.


2. Physical Principles of Ultrasound

2.1 Acoustic Wave Propagation

Ultrasound energy is transmitted as longitudinal pressure waves through tissues, causing molecular vibration.

2.2 Key Physical Phenomena

  • Absorption: Conversion of acoustic energy to heat (greater in collagen-rich tissues)
  • Reflection: Occurs at tissue interfaces (e.g., bone–soft tissue)
  • Refraction: Direction change at interfaces
  • Attenuation: Progressive loss of energy with depth

2.3 Frequency and Penetration

FrequencyApprox. PenetrationTypical Targets
1 MHz3–5 cmDeep muscles, hip, lumbar region
3 MHz1–2 cmSuperficial tendons, ligaments

Conceptual Graph: Frequency vs Depth of Effect

Depth of Effect
│        █████████  1 MHz (deeper)
│     ███████
│  █████
│███  3 MHz (superficial)
│█
└──────────────────────── Frequency

3. Mechanism of Action

3.1 Thermal Effects (Continuous Mode)

  • Increased tissue temperature
  • Vasodilation and increased blood flow
  • Reduced muscle spasm
  • Increased collagen extensibility
  • Pain modulation

3.2 Non-Thermal Effects (Pulsed Mode)

  • Stable cavitation: Enhances cell membrane permeability
  • Acoustic streaming: Facilitates metabolite transport
  • Accelerated tissue repair and inflammation resolution (selected protocols)

Conceptual Graph: Mode vs Tissue Effect

Effect
│        █████████  Thermal (Continuous)
│     ███████
│  █████  Non-thermal (Pulsed)
│███
└──────────────────────── Mode

4. Therapeutic Objectives

  • Pain reduction
  • Decrease muscle spasm
  • Improve soft-tissue extensibility
  • Promote tissue healing
  • Prepare tissues for stretching/mobilization

5. Indications

CategoryConditions
Tendon/LigamentTendinopathy (subacute/chronic), sprains
MuscleChronic spasm, trigger points
JointCapsulitis, osteoarthritis (non-acute)
Scar/AdhesionsPost-surgical fibrosis
SportsOveruse injuries (selected stages)

6. Contraindications and Precautions

Absolute Contraindications

  • Malignancy over treatment area
  • Pregnancy (over abdomen/pelvis)
  • Active hemorrhage
  • Thrombophlebitis
  • Over eyes, testes, or CNS tissue
  • Over growing epiphyses (children)
  • Over pacemakers/implanted electronics (site-dependent)

Relative Contraindications / Precautions

  • Impaired sensation
  • Ischemic tissues
  • Infection (avoid thermal dosing)
  • Acute inflammation (prefer pulsed/avoid)

7. Equipment Components

ComponentFunction
GeneratorProduces ultrasound energy
Transducer (sound head)Delivers energy
Coupling mediumReduces air interface
Control panelFrequency, intensity, duty cycle, time
CablesPower transmission

8. Dosimetric Parameters (Critical)

8.1 Mode Selection

ModeDuty CyclePrimary Effect
Continuous100%Thermal
Pulsed10–50%Non-thermal/mild thermal

8.2 Intensity Guidelines

FrequencyTypical Intensity
1 MHz0.5–2.0 W/cm²
3 MHz0.2–1.0 W/cm²

8.3 Treatment Area & Time

  • Area: ≤ 2× ERA (Effective Radiating Area)
  • Time: 5–10 minutes per area

Conceptual Graph: Intensity vs Effect

Therapeutic Effect
│        █████████  Optimal range
│     ███████
│  █████
│███  Under-dose
│█
│            ██  Over-dose (burn risk)
└──────────────────────── Intensity

9. Coupling Techniques

TechniqueIndicationNotes
Gel couplingFlat surfacesMost common
Water immersionIrregular/small areasKeep head 1–2 cm from skin
Gel padBony contoursImproves contact

Air is a poor conductor—adequate coupling is mandatory.


10. Pre-Procedure Preparation

Patient

  • Explain procedure and expected sensations (warmth/none)
  • Obtain consent
  • Inspect skin and sensation
  • Position comfortably; expose area

Equipment

  • Check transducer integrity
  • Select frequency, mode, intensity, time
  • Apply sufficient coupling medium

11. Operating Procedure (Step-by-Step)

  1. Parameter Setup: Choose frequency, mode, intensity, time
  2. Coupling: Apply gel generously (or water method)
  3. Application:
    • Keep transducer moving (circular/linear)
    • Speed ~ 4 cm/sec
    • Maintain full contact (or proper immersion distance)
  4. Monitoring: Ask about comfort; adjust if discomfort occurs
  5. Completion: Turn intensity to zero before lifting head

12. Monitoring During Treatment

  • Patient-reported heat or discomfort
  • Skin response
  • Signs of periosteal pain (reduce intensity/move faster)

Stop immediately if sharp pain or burning occurs.


13. Post-Treatment Care

  • Inspect skin
  • Reassess pain/ROM
  • Proceed with stretching or mobilization while tissues are warm
  • Document parameters and response

14. Dosage and Progression

PhaseRecommendation
AcuteAvoid or pulsed low dose
SubacutePulsed → continuous as tolerated
ChronicContinuous thermal dosing

Progress by time/intensity within safe limits and clinical response.


15. Integration with Rehabilitation

Ultrasound should be used to prepare tissues for:

  • Stretching
  • Joint mobilization
  • Therapeutic exercise

Ultrasound alone does not restore function.


16. Advantages and Limitations

Advantages

  • Targeted deep tissue effects
  • Versatile dosing (thermal/non-thermal)
  • Useful adjunct for soft-tissue conditions

Limitations

  • Operator-dependent
  • Small treatment area
  • Mixed evidence for some indications
  • Risk with poor technique

17. Safety and Quality Control

  • Regular transducer calibration (output testing)
  • Adequate coupling at all times
  • Continuous movement of sound head
  • Staff competency training

18. Documentation Standards

Record:

  • Area treated
  • Frequency, mode, intensity
  • Time and coupling method
  • Patient response

19. Clinical Pearls

  • Match frequency to depth
  • Move the sound head continuously
  • Treat small areas precisely
  • Use as a preparatory modality
  • Reassess outcomes every session

Conclusion

Therapeutic Ultrasound is an effective adjunct for pain modulation and tissue extensibility when applied with sound physical principles, accurate dosimetry, meticulous technique, and integration with active rehabilitation. Its benefits are maximized through clinical reasoning rather than routine application.


References

  1. Cameron MH. Physical Agents in Rehabilitation.
  2. Watson T. Ultrasound in contemporary physiotherapy practice. Ultrasound Med Biol.
  3. Robertson VJ, Baker KG. A review of therapeutic ultrasound. Phys Ther.
  4. Draper DO. Ultrasound and tissue heating. J Athl Train.
  5. Kisner C, Colby L, Borstad J. Therapeutic Exercise: Foundations and Techniques.
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