Title: Ultrasound
1Ultrasound
- Veronica Southard PT MS GCS
2Ultrasound general considerations
- Commonly used
- Indicated for tissue repair and pain relief
- Acoustic rather than electromagnetic
- For heating Deep heat like Daithermy I.e.
raises tissue temperature
3Ultrasound defined
- Inaudible, acoustic vibrations of high frequency
that may produce either thermal or non-thermal
physiologic effects. - As a clinician you need to know what your trying
to accomplish
4Transmission of Acoustic Energy
- Use molecular collision. A coupling medium is
used to enhance absorption, cause vibration. - Through the medium a minimum amount of
displacement occurs to the surrounding issues,
allowing the molecules to vibrate. - Eventually this wave of vibration has propagated
through the entire medium. - Biologic vibration
5Wave transmission
- Two types of waves travel through a solid medium
- 1. Longitudinal Molecules are displaced in the
direction the wave travels. In this wave, areas
of high molecular density are called
compressions, molecules get squeezed together.
Travel in solids and liquids. Rarefaction lower
molecular density molecules spread out. - 2. Transverse waves molecules become displaced
perpendicular to the direction in which the wave
is moving. Solids such as bone interfaces.
6Frequency of wave transmission
- Audible sound is transmitted bet 16kHz and20 kHz.
- Therapeutic US is between .75- 3MHz.
- The gt the frequency the more focused the beam of
sound produced - In humans the lower the frequency the greater the
depth of penetration.
7Velocity
- Velocity of US propagation is directly related to
the density. The more dense and rigid materials
have a higher velocity of transmission.
8Attenuation
- Transmitting through various tissues reduces the
intensity of the US energy. - Decreased energy may be due to absorption,
- Dispersion,or scattering of the sound wave after
reflection or refraction. - Therefore penetration and absorption are
inversely related. - As the frequency increases, the absorption
increases, thus less energy is transmitted to
deeper tissues
9Acoustic Impedance
- DEF reflection or refraction of a sound wave
when it encounters a boundary or an interface
between 2 tissues. - If the acoustic impedance is the same for both
structures, all the the sound will be transmitted
and none will be reflected. - Standing waves or hot spots develop when the
energy reflected at the tissue interfaces meets
new energy being transmitted. This new energy
can cause tissue damage.
10Components of an Ultrasound Generator
- US generator is made up of a High Frequency
electrical generator and transformer. - A frequency of 1MHz means the crystal deforms 1
million times / second
11Transducer
- Aka APPLICATOR OR SOUNDHEAD
- Composed of piezoelectric crystal such as quartz,
or synthetic ceramic. - The crystal in the transducer converts the
electrical energy to acoustic energy through
mechanical deformation of the piezoelectric
crystal
12Piezoelectric Effect
- Created by generating an AC current at the same
frequency as the crystal. The piezoelectric
effect is the expansion and contraction of the
crystal in response to the passage of current. - 1. Direct piezoelectric effect
- 2. Indirect (Reverse) piezoelectric effect
13Effective Radiating Area
- Def surface of the transducer producing the
sound wave. - Dependent on the surface area of the crystal.
- Experiments have shown when treating 10 using
- 2 ERA will increase temperature 3.6C( vigorous)
- 6 ERA 1.1C increase (mild heating)
14Frequency of Therapeutic US
- Frequency is the of wave cycles/second.
- Clinically use 1 and 3MHz.
- 1 MHz less energy is absorbed in the
superficial tissues and thus there is greater
penetration. - 3 MHz Newer units. More superficial heating
then 1 MHz. - Clearly, the intensity of US does not determine
penetration depths, the frequency does.
15The Ultrasound Beam
- The larger the sound head the more focused or
collimated the US beam. - Beams generated at 1 MHz are more divergent than
US at 3 MHz.
16BNR Beam Nonuniformity Ratio
- Variability of the ultrasound beam intensity.
- FDA acceptable between 2 and 6. Labeled.
- The lower the BNR, the more uniform the output of
the machine.
17Pulsed vs. Continuous Wave US
- 1. Continuous sound intensity is constant
throughout treatment. US energy is produced
100 of the time. - 2. Pulsed interrupted intensity. No US energy
is produced during the off period. In this case
the average intensity over time is reduced. Duty
cycle refers to on time. -
18Amplitude, Power and Intensity
- Amplitude magnitude of the vibration from a
point of equilibrium. Cm or cm2 - Power Watts. Total US energy in the beam .
- Intensity Rate of energy delivery per unit area.
- Spatial averaged intensity
- Spatial Peak intensity
- Temporal peak intensity
- Temporal averaged intensity
- Spatial averaged temporal peak
19Physiologic Effects of US
- Thermal and non thermal
- Thermal Attenuation is caused by the conversion
of US energy to heat through absorption and to a
lesser degree by scattering and beam deflection
20Clinical Effects of Thermal US
- 1.Increased extensibility of collagen in jt.
Capsules and tendons. - 2. Decreased joint stiffness.
- 3. Decreased m spasm
- 4. Modulation of pain
- 5. Increased bl fl
- 6. Mild inflamm response that may reduce chronic
inflamm
21Advantages of Thermal US
- Tissues with high concentrations of collagen such
as ligs, m ,tendons, jt. Capsules, jt. Menisci,
intermuscular interfaces, NR, periosteum,
cortical bone, and other deep tissues which may
be selectively heated to the therapeutic range
without causing a significant tissue temp
increase in the skin or fat.
22Effects of Non Thermal US
- Cavitation formation of gas filled bubbles that
expand and compress because of ultrasonically
induced pressure changes in tissue fluids - 1. Stable cav. Occurs 2ary to regularly repeated
pressure changes over many acoustic cycles. - 2. Unstable cav. Violent large swings before
implosion and collapse occurs. High intensities
at low frequencies. - 3. Acoustic microstreaming- unidirectional
movement of fluids along the boundaries of cell
membranes resulting from mechanical pressure
waves in an US field
23Non thermal Therapeutic Effects
- 1. Stimulation of fibroblast activity
- 2. Bone healing and repair of non union fracture
24Techniques of Application
- 1. Frequency Acute low intensity or pulsed OD
to BIW 6-8 days until acute sx subside. - Chronic seen alternating days, continue until
improvement. Without improvement following 3-4
tx, D/c or change parameters - 2. Duration
- Size of area to be tx
- Intensity in w/cm2
- Frequency
- Desired temperature increase
25Summary of Effects of US
26Coupling Medium/Methods
- Decreases impedance at the air skin juncture.
Eliminates air from body part bet US head and tx
surface. - For optimal tx effects, the sound head should be
ll and perpendicular to tx surface.
27Exposure Techniques
- Direct contact surface must be larger than the
transducer - Immersion can be used when the treatment area
is smaller than the transducer. Treatment area
is irregular. - Plastic, ceramic, rubber basin should be used
- Tap water
- Move transducer ll to surface you are txing. _at_ .5
1 cm away. Wipe away air bubbles. Intensity
should be increased up to 50
28Indications Ultrasound
29Contraindications
30Phonophoresis
- US used to drove in whole molecules of topical
meds. Safe painless, noninvasive. Active
transport as a result of increased membrane
permeability during sonation.
31US in Combination with other Modalities
- There is no proof that US in combination with
other modalities is more beneficial. In fact a
HP may increase superficial attenuation therefore
decreasing the depth of penetration. - Pulsed US and cold should however be a choice to
promote soft tissue healing.
32Documentation
- Record specific parameters in order to reproduce
or change treatments. - Include Frequency, Intensity, Pulsed/continuous,
Duration, pt. position, - Direct/immersion. Pt response to modality.