Therapeutic ultrasound uses high-frequency sound waves (typically 1 MHz or 3 MHz) generated by a piezoelectric crystal in a handheld transducer and transmitted into tissue through an acoustic coupling gel. Unlike diagnostic ultrasound — which creates images — therapeutic ultrasound is designed to produce measurable biological effects in injured tissue.
At 1 MHz, sound waves penetrate 3–5 cm deep, making it appropriate for deep structures like hip flexors, gluteal muscles, and the lumbar spine. At 3 MHz, energy is absorbed within 1–2 cm — ideal for superficial tendons, the patellar tendon, Achilles, and wrist structures.
The physiotherapist selects continuous or pulsed mode, frequency, intensity, and treatment duration based on your specific tissue type, injury stage, and therapeutic goal. At RCP Health Oakville, therapeutic ultrasound is never applied in isolation — it is always one component of a structured, individualized physiotherapy plan.
Therapeutic ultrasound is not a type of physiotherapy. It is one evidence-based modality among many that your physiotherapist may integrate with manual therapy, exercise prescription, and patient education to achieve optimal outcomes.