Application of Capacitive-Resistive Electric Transfer in Physiotherapeutic Clinical Practice and Sports.
Luis De Sousa-De SousaCristina TebarJose Luis Maté-MuñozJuan Hernández-LougedoManuel BarbaMaría Del Carmen Lozano-EstevanManuel Vicente Garnacho-CastañoPablo García FernándezPublished in: International journal of environmental research and public health (2021)
Diathermy techniques embody an oscillating electrical current passaging through the body tissues generating therapeutic heat; use of this technique in the physiotherapy field has been introduced recently, and because there is scarce information, the following review is proposed, aiming to explore the available evidence on applying CRET in physiotherapy clinical practice and sports. A systematic search was led through a keyword search on PubMed, MedLine, DialNet, Scopus, PEDro, Web of Science and Clinicaltrials databases. Including randomised controlled trials and quasi-experimental studies, which applied radiofrequency diathermy in sports and physiotherapy fields, without any restrictions on dates, published in Spanish, English, Portuguese or Italian. Data extraction was conducted through the Cochrane data extraction form and presented in tabular format; 30 articles were included for analysis, and assessment of methodological quality was made through the PEDro scale with a "Good/Fair" general quality score. The nature of existing articles does not allow a quantitative analysis. Conclusion: identified fields of applications were musculoskeletal physiotherapy, treatment of pelvic floor and sexual dysfunctions, as well as dermato-functional physiotherapy and sports, evidencing an increase of skin temperature, enhanced skin and muscle blood perfusion, as well as reporting an increase in oxyhaemoglobin. Further research is needed. Prospero registration number: CRD42020215592.
Keyphrases
- clinical practice
- big data
- electronic health record
- public health
- soft tissue
- healthcare
- quality improvement
- gene expression
- wound healing
- skeletal muscle
- systematic review
- mental health
- magnetic resonance imaging
- magnetic resonance
- computed tomography
- heat stress
- deep learning
- artificial intelligence
- adverse drug
- data analysis
- health information
- meta analyses