Ultrasound
Ultrasound is produced by
Piezoelectric crystals
The reverse piezoelectric effect (electropiezo effect)
- AC current is passed through a piezoelectric crystal resulting in contraction and expansion
Coupling method
Treatment area
- Limited to an area slightly larger than the diameter of the sound head
Near field (Fresnel zone)
Ultrasonic output is described in terms of
Frequency
- Most commercial therapeutic ultrasound units offer 1- and/or 3-MHz outputs
Low-frequency (1-MHz)
High-frequency (3-MHz)
- Energy is rapidly absorbed and heats three times faster than 1-MHz ultrasound
Power and intensity
- Intensity describes the strength of the sound waves at a given location within the tissues being treated
Spatial average intensity
Biophysical effects
Nonthermal biophysical effects
Thermal biophysical effects
Duty cycle continuous output
- Used for tissues 5 cm or more deep
Duty cycle pulsed output (20%, 25%, or 50%)
Biophysical nonthermal effects
Cavitation (non-thermal)
Microstreaming (non-thermal)
Baseline muscle temperature
Mild heating
- Accelerates metabolic rate in tissue
Moderate heating