Can ultrasound repair undermined tissue? If so, how does it work?
Answer:
No. Ultrasound does not repair damaged tissue. I have ultrasound therapy for 6 months on an elbow injury. What it does is to micro polish the damaged nouns which stimulates a greater blood supply which then help the body mechanisms to repair tissue.
It is conspicuously useful for tendons ligiaments which dont enjoy very apposite blood supply and the extra stimulation offered by the ultrasound encourages more fast healing than otherwise would be the covering.
I'm sure that it can. In college I ran cross country and pushed my body to the closing stages of its limits. My legs, after a time, become quite dilapidated and seemded to only be getting worse. My physical trainers have me using ultrasonics on them twice a day and contained by a few weeks I felt much better. Apparently it have a massaging effect on the worn out muscle and is also capable of repairing bone. I don't know the machinery, but it worked on me.
Therapeutic ultrasound is hypothesized as beneficial in tissue medicinal.
>>During the inflammation phase, ultrasound has a stimulating effect on the flagstaff cells, platelets, white cell with phagocytic roles and the macrophages.
>>During the proliferative phase (scar production) it also have a stimulative effect (cellular up regulation), though the primary active target are now the fibroblasts, endothelial cell and myofibroblasts.
>>In remodelling phase, the application of therapeutic ultrasound can influence the remodelling of the defect tissue.
Read more here: http://www.electrotherapy.org/electro/ul...
THEY HAVE A PROCEDURE WHERE THEY HIT A NERVE WITH SOUND TO DEADEN IT