Authors
Christopher R Bawiec, Youhan Sunny, David Diaz, Sumati Nadkarni, Michael S Weingarten, Michael Neidrauer, David J Margolis, Leonid Zubkov, Peter A Lewin
Publication date
2015/5/22
Conference
Micro-and Nanotechnology Sensors, Systems, and Applications VII
Volume
9467
Pages
63-69
Publisher
SPIE
Description
This paper describes a novel, wearable, battery powered ultrasound applicator that was evaluated as a therapeutic tool for healing of chronic wounds, such as venous ulcers. The low frequency and low intensity (~100mW/cm2) applicator works by generating ultrasound waves with peak-to-peak pressure amplitudes of 55 kPa at 20 kHz. The device was used in a pilot human study (n=25) concurrently with remote optical (diffuse correlation spectroscopy - DCS) monitoring to assess the healing outcome. More specifically, the ulcers’ healing status was determined by measuring tissue oxygenation and blood flow in the capillary network. This procedure facilitated an early prognosis of the treatment outcome and – once verified - may eventually enable customization of wound management. The outcome of the study shows that the healing patients of the ultrasound treated group had a statistically improved (p<0.05 …
Scholar articles
CR Bawiec, Y Sunny, D Diaz, S Nadkarni… - Micro-and Nanotechnology Sensors, Systems, and …, 2015