Clinical Implementation of Combined Quasi-Static Ultrasound Elastographic and Regional Blood Flow Assessment Techniques, in Areas of Forearm Myofascial Dysfunction, Before and After Osteopathic Physical Manipulation

A fast-growing area of high-resolution ultrasound imaging is localizing painful regions termed myofascial tender points (MTP). To mitigate pain and reduce musculoskeletal nodularity and stiffness, osteopathic physicians perform loco-regional osteopathic manipulative procedures (OMT). Current MTP-dia...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inThe Journal of the Acoustical Society of America Vol. 154; no. 4; p. A223
Main Authors Pedapati, Chandhana, Keane, James, Durr, Timothy, Heath, Deborah M., Mast, Douglas, Bay, Curtis, Makin, Inder Raj S.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published 01.10.2023
Online AccessGet full text
ISSN0001-4966
1520-8524
DOI10.1121/10.0023346

Cover

More Information
Summary:A fast-growing area of high-resolution ultrasound imaging is localizing painful regions termed myofascial tender points (MTP). To mitigate pain and reduce musculoskeletal nodularity and stiffness, osteopathic physicians perform loco-regional osteopathic manipulative procedures (OMT). Current MTP-diagnostic and clinical efficacy criteria using sono-elastographic, or regional flow biomarkers are poorly characterized. This research aims to develop a well-grounded approach to identify forearm MTPs and track changes post-physical interventions, using elastography combined with regional power Doppler. A 44-subject clinical study cohort, was randomly divided in OMT, mild exercise and “rest” groups: imaging was performed using an open-platform SonixTouch Q + . During controlled tissue deformation (4.5-5 Hz), ultrasound elastography was performed by computing root-main-square (RMS) strain of beamformed ultrasound echoes (13 MHz, 15fps) for 3 s. Similarly, power Doppler maps were averaged over 5 seconds (5–12 fps), to evaluate regional blood flow. Data acquisition and processing sequence was repeated post-intervention. Changes in tissue stiffness as well as regional blood flow were compared pre- and post-intervention for all three human subject groups. With the experimental technique used in this study, a significant reduction in tissue stiffness, and increase in regional blood flow is demonstrated in the OMT group compared to the exercise and rest group.
ISSN:0001-4966
1520-8524
DOI:10.1121/10.0023346