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Wearable long duration ultrasound therapy pilot study in rotator cuff tendinopathy
Author(s) -
George K. Lewis,
Lyndon V. Hernandez,
Ralph Ortiz
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
proceedings of meetings on acoustics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.15
H-Index - 16
ISSN - 1939-800X
DOI - 10.1121/1.4800272
Subject(s) - medicine , physical therapy , therapeutic ultrasound , rotator cuff , visual analogue scale , wearable computer , tendinopathy , institutional review board , physical medicine and rehabilitation , ultrasound , tendon , surgery , computer science , radiology , embedded system
Approximately one-third of the westernized adult population will experience some type of shoulder pain. The purpose of this pilot study was to evaluate a novel self-applied wearable therapeutic ultrasound device in the management of shoulder pain from rotator cuff tendinopathy. The Institutional Review Board of Cayuga Medical Center (CMC) approved this study and informed consent for the study was obtained from all subjects. The wearable ultrasound device provides 90 mW/cm2, 2.95 MHz, continuous-wave ultrasound for 5.5 hours on a single charge. Four subjects meeting the studies inclusion criteria, presenting with rotator cuff tendinopathy, and demonstrating cognitive and functional ability to apply the pager-size device were enrolled at the outpatient physical therapy center of CMC. Subjects were instructed to wear the device for 3-4 hours per day for 12 consecutive treatment sessions, and record their daily pain score on the visual analog scale (1 to 10) and global rate of health improvement scale (-7 to ...

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