Byl N N, McKenzie A L, West J M, Whitney J D, Hunt T K, Scheuenstuhl H A
Graduate Program in Physical Therapy, University of California School of Medicine, San Francisco.
Arch Phys Med Rehabil. 1992 Jul;73(7):656-64.
This study reports on the effect of low-dose ultrasound in accelerating wound healing in matched pairs of surgically induced incisions and full-thickness and partial-thickness lesions in 11 Yucatan mini-pigs after 7 days of healing and 5 days of sonation. Tensile strength, collagen deposition (hydroxyproline), reduction in wound size (full-thickness lesion), and mast-cell degranulation were significantly greater in the sonated lesions than in the sham-treated controls (p = 0.01). Sonation enhanced strength by 24% and collagen deposition by 29%, when compared with controls. There were no significant differences in the quality of healing as measured by an ordinal scale. The results suggest that within the first week of healing, low-dose ultrasound facilitates wound healing. More research is needed to confirm the most effective dose, frequency, and treatment duration and intervention time for maximum healing.
本研究报告了低剂量超声对11只尤卡坦小型猪手术切口、全层和部分厚度损伤愈合的影响。在愈合7天和超声处理5天后,对配对的损伤进行观察。与假处理对照组相比,超声处理的损伤部位在拉伸强度、胶原蛋白沉积(羟脯氨酸)、伤口大小减小(全层损伤)和肥大细胞脱颗粒方面均有显著增加(p = 0.01)。与对照组相比,超声处理使强度提高了24%,胶原蛋白沉积增加了29%。按序数尺度衡量,愈合质量没有显著差异。结果表明,在愈合的第一周内,低剂量超声促进伤口愈合。需要更多的研究来确定最有效的剂量、频率、治疗持续时间和干预时间,以实现最大程度的愈合。