• Title of article

    Radiofrequency probe treatment for subfailure ligament injury: a biomechanical study of rabbit ACL

  • Author/Authors

    Seth D Dodds، نويسنده , , Manohar M. Panjabi، نويسنده , , John P Daigneault، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2004
  • Pages
    9
  • From page
    175
  • To page
    183
  • Abstract
    Objective. Utilizing a rabbit anterior cruciate ligament model of ligamentous subfailure injury, biomechanical properties of injured ligament treated with radiofrequency energy were evaluated. It was hypothesized that an injured ligament treated with radiofrequency probe would demonstrate restoration of biomechanical properties lost through injury. Background. Radiofrequency probe, thermal treatment has been utilized in the clinical setting to address joint instability caused by ligamentous laxity from injury or repetitive microtrauma. The biomechanical effects of radiofrequency probe thermal treatment on injured ligamentous tissues have not been studied in the laboratory. Design. Three groups of specimens: Control, Sham, and Treatment, 10 each, were tested under identical conditions. Methods. Viscoelastic behavior was analyzed using a relaxation test (6% strain, up to 180 s) performed before injury, after injury, and after injury plus sham or injury plus radiofrequency probe treatment. Results. After injury the normalized forces in the relaxation test decreased by approximately 50%. The post-treatment relaxation test revealed significant (P<0.01) restoration of the average relaxation force in the Treatment group to that of the Control group (0.79, SD 0.11 vs. 0.80, SD 0.10). Both of these groups were significantly different from the Sham group (0.44, SD 0.11). Additionally, stretch-to-failure test showed partial restoration of the toe region of the load–deformation curve by the radiofrequency treatment. Conclusions. The radiofrequency probe treatment is shown to be an effective mechanism for restoring initial ligament tensile stiffness and viscoelastic characteristics lost by the subfailure injury in vitro.
  • Keywords
    Subfailure , Sprain , Ligament , Radiofrequency probe , thermal treatment
  • Journal title
    Clinical Biomechanics
  • Serial Year
    2004
  • Journal title
    Clinical Biomechanics
  • Record number

    486255