An investigation into the depth of penetration of low level laser therapy through the equine tendon in vivo

<p>Abstract</p> <p>Low level laser therapy (LLLT) is frequently used in the treatment of wounds, soft tissue injury and in pain management. The exact penetration depth of LLLT in human tissue remains unspecified. Similar uncertainty regarding penetration depth arises in treating an...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Ryan Teresa, Smith RKW
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2007-05-01
Series:Irish Veterinary Journal
Subjects:
low
Online Access:http://www.irishvetjournal.org/content/60/5/295
id doaj-768e4843084e4f5d970be18bdcb3ec3c
record_format Article
spelling doaj-768e4843084e4f5d970be18bdcb3ec3c2020-11-25T00:26:35ZengBMCIrish Veterinary Journal2046-04812007-05-0160529529910.1186/2046-0481-60-5-295An investigation into the depth of penetration of low level laser therapy through the equine tendon in vivoRyan TeresaSmith RKW<p>Abstract</p> <p>Low level laser therapy (LLLT) is frequently used in the treatment of wounds, soft tissue injury and in pain management. The exact penetration depth of LLLT in human tissue remains unspecified. Similar uncertainty regarding penetration depth arises in treating animals. This study was designed to test the hypothesis that transmission of LLLT in horses is increased by clipping the hair and/or by cleaning the area to be treated with alcohol, but is unaffected by coat colour. A LLLT probe (810 nm, 500 mW) was applied to the medial aspect of the superficial flexor tendon of seventeen equine forelimbs <it>in vivo</it>. A light sensor was applied to the lateral aspect, directly opposite the laser probe to measure the amount of light transmitted. Light transmission was not affected by individual horse, coat colour or leg. However, it was associated with leg condition (F = 4.42, p = 0.0032). Tendons clipped dry and clipped and cleaned with alcohol, were both associated with greater transmission of light than the unprepared state. Use of alcohol without clipping was not associated with an increase in light transmission. These results suggest that, when applying laser to a subcutaneous structure in the horse, the area should be clipped and cleaned beforehand.</p> http://www.irishvetjournal.org/content/60/5/295lowlevellasertherapyequinetendon
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ryan Teresa
Smith RKW
spellingShingle Ryan Teresa
Smith RKW
An investigation into the depth of penetration of low level laser therapy through the equine tendon in vivo
Irish Veterinary Journal
low
level
laser
therapy
equine
tendon
author_facet Ryan Teresa
Smith RKW
author_sort Ryan Teresa
title An investigation into the depth of penetration of low level laser therapy through the equine tendon in vivo
title_short An investigation into the depth of penetration of low level laser therapy through the equine tendon in vivo
title_full An investigation into the depth of penetration of low level laser therapy through the equine tendon in vivo
title_fullStr An investigation into the depth of penetration of low level laser therapy through the equine tendon in vivo
title_full_unstemmed An investigation into the depth of penetration of low level laser therapy through the equine tendon in vivo
title_sort investigation into the depth of penetration of low level laser therapy through the equine tendon in vivo
publisher BMC
series Irish Veterinary Journal
issn 2046-0481
publishDate 2007-05-01
description <p>Abstract</p> <p>Low level laser therapy (LLLT) is frequently used in the treatment of wounds, soft tissue injury and in pain management. The exact penetration depth of LLLT in human tissue remains unspecified. Similar uncertainty regarding penetration depth arises in treating animals. This study was designed to test the hypothesis that transmission of LLLT in horses is increased by clipping the hair and/or by cleaning the area to be treated with alcohol, but is unaffected by coat colour. A LLLT probe (810 nm, 500 mW) was applied to the medial aspect of the superficial flexor tendon of seventeen equine forelimbs <it>in vivo</it>. A light sensor was applied to the lateral aspect, directly opposite the laser probe to measure the amount of light transmitted. Light transmission was not affected by individual horse, coat colour or leg. However, it was associated with leg condition (F = 4.42, p = 0.0032). Tendons clipped dry and clipped and cleaned with alcohol, were both associated with greater transmission of light than the unprepared state. Use of alcohol without clipping was not associated with an increase in light transmission. These results suggest that, when applying laser to a subcutaneous structure in the horse, the area should be clipped and cleaned beforehand.</p>
topic low
level
laser
therapy
equine
tendon
url http://www.irishvetjournal.org/content/60/5/295
work_keys_str_mv AT ryanteresa aninvestigationintothedepthofpenetrationoflowlevellasertherapythroughtheequinetendoninvivo
AT smithrkw aninvestigationintothedepthofpenetrationoflowlevellasertherapythroughtheequinetendoninvivo
AT ryanteresa investigationintothedepthofpenetrationoflowlevellasertherapythroughtheequinetendoninvivo
AT smithrkw investigationintothedepthofpenetrationoflowlevellasertherapythroughtheequinetendoninvivo
_version_ 1725343953229709312