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Introduction To Physical Agents & Electrotherapy - DPT-V: DR - Fouziabatool PT - PP-DPT Lecturer, RCRS

This document provides an introduction to physical agents and electrotherapy used in physical therapy. It discusses various physical agents including thermal agents like heat and cold, mechanical agents like traction and compression, and electromagnetic agents like ultrasound and electric currents. It describes the aims of physical therapy like relieving pain, improving range of motion and function. The history of electrotherapy and use of physical agents in medicine is covered, noting they have been used for centuries to treat musculoskeletal issues. Gate control theory of pain is cited as the basis for TENS to control pain. Certain agents like infrared lamps are no longer used as practices have evolved.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
116 views48 pages

Introduction To Physical Agents & Electrotherapy - DPT-V: DR - Fouziabatool PT - PP-DPT Lecturer, RCRS

This document provides an introduction to physical agents and electrotherapy used in physical therapy. It discusses various physical agents including thermal agents like heat and cold, mechanical agents like traction and compression, and electromagnetic agents like ultrasound and electric currents. It describes the aims of physical therapy like relieving pain, improving range of motion and function. The history of electrotherapy and use of physical agents in medicine is covered, noting they have been used for centuries to treat musculoskeletal issues. Gate control theory of pain is cited as the basis for TENS to control pain. Certain agents like infrared lamps are no longer used as practices have evolved.
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Introduction to Physical agents & Electrotherapy_____ DPT-V

Dr.FOUZIABATOOL PT.PP-DPT Lecturer, RCRS

PHYSICAL THERAPY

The treatment of physical dysfunction or injury by the use of therapeutic exercise and the application of modalities, intended to restore or facilitate normal function or development.

Aims of Physical Therapy

Relieve Pain
Modalities,

Manual Techniques, Education

Improve ROM
Modalities,

Manual Techniques, Ex. Instruction

Strengthen muscles
Exercise

Instruction, Man. Res. Exercises Devices, Correct Impairments

Improve Function
Assistive

ELECTROTHERAPY

Electrotherapy is the branch of physiotherapy characterized by the treatment of various diseases and disorders with the help of electricity or electrical means.
Specifically, electrotherapy uses energy waves that are part of the electromagnetic spectrum to produce desired physiological and chemical effects in the body

Electromagnetic Spectrum

Physical Agents

Physical agents are various forms of energy and materials applied to patients and their means of application
It includes heat, cold, water, pressure, sound, electromagnetic radiation and electrical currents

Actinotherapy

The use of Ultraviolet, other parts of the Spectrum of the suns rays, or X-rays to treat various disorders, particularly Skin diseases. Heliotherapy: the therapeutic use of Sunlight

Categories of Physical Agents


THERMAL Deep heating agents e.g. Diathermy Superficial heating agents e.g.. Hot Pack Cooling agents e.g. Ice Pack MECHANICAL Traction e.g. Mechanical Traction Compression e.g. Elastic Bandage Water e.g. Whirlpool Sound e.g. Ultrasound

Cont
ELECTROMAGNETIC
Electromagnetic tools e.g. Ultraviolet Electric currents e.g. TENS

01.THERMAL AGENTS

These agents increase or decrease the tissue temperature Different thermal agents produce the greatest change in temperature in different types and areas of tissue

Hot packs produces greatest temperature increase in superficial tissues with high thermal conductivity in the area directly below it

Cont

Ultrasound produces the most heat in tissues with high ultrasound absorption coefficients, such as bone and tendon. It produces the effect up to a depth of 5cm but only in small area

Cont

Physiological Effects of thermal agents Increase the tissue temperature To increase the circulation Increase metabolic rate Increase soft tissue extensibility Decrease pain

o o o o o

Cont

When to apply cold agents???????

o
o o

To decrease circulation Decrease metabolic rate Decrease pain Huntings Phenomenon Cold agents are mostly preferred in acute inflammation PRICER phenomenon in Acute Conditions

02. MECHANICAL AGENTS

Apply mechanical force to increase or decrease pressure in or on the body

Traction decrease the pressure between structures such as nerves or joints or other sensory changes or that become inflamed when compressed

Traction table

Cont

Compression increases the pressure between structures to counteract fluid pressure and to control edema

Hydrotherapy

The application of water is called hydrotherapy Water provides resistance to increase local pressure, and buoyancy decrease pressure on weight bearing structures Archimedes Principle Used for exercise when an area is immersed and for cleansing or debriding open wound with or without immersion

Fibromyalgia Ankylosing Spondylitis

Sound

It is a mechanical form of energy composed of alternating waves of compression and rarefaction Frequency greater than 20,000 cycles per second Thermal and non-thermal effects Continuous and pulsed mode

Ultrasound

03. ELECTROMAGNETIC AGENTS


Electromagnetic agents apply electromagnetic energy in the form of electromagnetic radiation or an electrical currents Electromagnetic tools Ultraviolet radiation, which has a frequency of 7.5*1014 to 1015 cycles per second produce erythema and tanning of the skin but doesn't produce heat Infrared radiation, which has a frequency of 10 11 to 1014 cycles per second produces heat in superficial tissues

Cont

Short wave diathermy , which has a frequency of 10 million to 100 million cycles per second, produces heat in both superficial and deep tissues

SWD

Electric currents

The effects and clinical application of electrical currents vary according to the waveform, intensity, duration and direction of the current flow and according to the types to which the current is applied These currents depolarize nerves, causing sensory or motor responses that may be used to control pain, increase muscle strength , control the formation of edema, promote wound healing etc

Classification of Electrical Currents


On the basis of Direction On the basis of Frequency On the basis of Voltage On the basis of Amperage On the basis of Biophysical Effects

Areas of Electrotherapy
Low frequency currents Medium frequency currents High frequency currents Phototherapy Elctrodiagnosis Biofeedback

Cont
Low Frequency Currents:
Frequency range 0 to 100 cycles per second o Use in the stimulation of nerve e.g.
o

Direct current, IDC, Sinusoidal current, Diadynamic current, High voltage pulsed galvanic current, TENS

CONT.
Medium frequency Currents:
o o

Frequency in the range of 1000 to 10,000 cycles per second Use for muscle re-education, retard the rate of muscle atrophy, drainage of edema and for pain relief

Russian Current, Interferential Current, etc.

Cont
High frequency currents:
Frequency more than 10,000 cycles per second o Produce deep heat inside the tissues e.g. SWD Therapeutic Ultrasound Microwave diathermy
o

Cont
Phototherapy:
o o

Treatments of various disease and disorders with the help of light Pain relief by heat, acceleration of healing through elevation of temperature, counter irritation and photochemical effects

e.g. Infrared rays, ultraviolet rays and LASER Heliotherapy

Cont
Electrodiagnosis:
o

It means the detection of the disease and disorders by the use of electrotherapeutic currents or electromyography

TESTS: Rheobase, Chronaxie, Strength duration curve, Pulse ratio, Galvanic tetanic ratio, Nerve conduction test etc

Cont
Electromyography:
o

It is the study of electrical activity of muscle by means of surface electrodes placed over the skin or needle electrodes inserted in muscle itself

e.g. Motor unit potential, Motor nerve conduction, Sensory nerve conduction etc

Biofeedback:
o

It is the process of furnishing the information to an individual about the body function so as to get some voluntary control over it Biofeedback is a treatment technique in which people are trained to improve their health by using signals from their own bodies. Physical therapists for example, use Biofeedback to help stroke victims regain movement in paralyzed muscles. Psychologists use it to help tense and anxious clients learn to relax.

EMG biofeedback

Cont

HISTORY OF ELECTROTHERAPY
o

In 1646, Sir Thomas Browne, physician used the word Electricity for the first time Aetius, a Greek physician had prescribed the shocks of Torpedo, an electric fish for the treatment of gout, headache There are also reports from the 17th century of charged gold leaf being used to prevent scarring from smallpox lesions

Cont
o

1780, Luigi Galvani a professor of the anatomy at the faculty of Bologna, first observed the quick twitching of the muscle produced by the electricity in a nerve muscle preparation of the frogs leg French physicist Abbe Nollet administered the shock from Leyden jar to 180 royal guards simultaneously in the presence of the King Johann Gottlob Kruger, professor of Medicine at Halle, gave a series of lecture to medical students in 1743 entitled thoughts about the electricity. These were published in 1744 enlarged by notes and reprinted the following year. It was the first book on medical electricity.

Cont
o

His pupil Christian Gottlieb Kratzenstein_ book____ published in 1745 was the first to use medical electricity in its title Richard Lovett in England treated many persons with static shocks and published a treatise in 1756 describing the numerous conditions for which electrotherapy was to be recommended

Cont
o

John Wesley in 1759 published his own experiences in the book titled Desideratum

Bertholon described his techniques with its role in the cure of eight paralysis
Guys Hospital in London is recognized as the first hospital physical therapy department Renowned Physician S. Weir Mitchell. endorsed exercises of muscles by faradic stimulation

History of Use of Physical Agents in Medicine and Rehabilitation


o

Physical agents have been a component of medical and rehabilitation treatment for many centuries The remains of bath houses with steam rooms and pools of hot and cold water that can still be seen in many cities of the ancient Romans and Greeks provide evidence that these cultures used heat and water to maintain health and to treat various musculoskeletal and respiratory problems

Cont
o

Before the widespread availability of antibiotics and effective analgesic and anti-inflammatory drugs, physical agents were commonly used to treat infection, pain, and inflammation Use of sunlight for the treatment of tuberculosis, bone and joint disease, and the use of warm Epsom salt baths for the treatment of sore or swollen limbs

Cont Use of physical agent for biological process


o

TENS is use to control pain was developed based on the gate control theory of pain modulation as proposed by Melzack and Wall

Physical agents fallen out of favor


o

Infrared lamps_______ were used to treat open wounds because they provide superficial heat that can dry out the wound bed; however these lamps no longer use for this application because it is now known that wounds heal more rapidly when kept moist

Sunlight___ was used to treat T.B. infection etc. not used now since the advent of Antibiotics

Cont

SWD_____ was popular 20 to 30 years ago, but because of some side effects (burn) is rarely used in United States at this time

The Role of Rehabilitation in Patient Care

Rehabilitation is a goal-oriented treatment process designed to maximize independence in individuals who have compromised function due to underlying pathological processes and secondary impairments Medical treatment addressees at the underlying pathology or disease, rehabilitation focuses on sequelae of pathology

The Role of physical agents in Rehabilitation

APTA position statement concerning the use of physical agents, published in 1995, states that

without documentation which justifies the necessity of the exclusive use of physical agents/modalities, in the absence of other skilled therapeutic or educational intervention, should not be considered physical therapy

Cont

Physical agents primarily effects level of impairment Promote improvements at the levels of disability and handicap

References

Physical agents in Rehabilitation by Michelle H. Camron Claytons Electrotherapy Electrotherapy by Subhash Khatri

General Contra-indications for Electrotherapy

Nature of restriction, the nature and distribution of the physiological effects of the physical agent, and the distribution of energy produced by the physical agent

Pregnancy Malignancy Pacemaker Impaired sensation Impaired mentation

THE END

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