Patellar Tendon Elasticity and Temperature Following after a 448 Kilohertz Radiofrequency Intervention on Active Healthy Subjects: An Open Controlled Clinical Trial.
María Cuevas-CerveraDaniel Aguilar NuñezMaria Aguilar GarcíaMaría Carmen García-RíosAna González-MuñozSantiago Navarro LedesmaPublished in: Diagnostics (Basel, Switzerland) (2023)
The purpose of this study was to analyze the changes in the elasticity and temperature of the patellar tendon produced by the application of a radiofrequency at 448 kHz (CRMR) just after and 7 days after the intervention. An open controlled clinical trial was used with participants being recruited from a private clinic. The experimental group ( n = 22) received a 448 kHz CRMR treatment while the control group ( n = 22) did not receive any type of intervention. Quantitative ultrasound strain elastography (SEL) and thermography were used to collect data from 4 different areas of the patellar tendon. These areas were measured at the start (T0), just after (T1), and seven days after (T2) the intervention. There were thermal changes immediately after the intervention ( p < 0.001). In addition, when the measurements were collected just after the intervention and seven days after they were analyzed, significant changes ( p < 0.001) in temperature were observed in the tendons of both groups. Finally, a low but significant association (r = 0.434, p < 0.04) was observed between the elastic properties of the tendon at its insertion in the patella and thermal changes just after the 448 kHz intervention.