What Are the Different Types of Shock Therapy?
Shock therapy is a type of physical therapy that stimulates your muscles to increase mobility and strength. It may also provide pain relief and reduce inflammation.
Extracorporeal shockwave therapy (ESWT) utilizes acoustic waves to break up soft tissue calcifications, promote collagen synthesis and release growth factors. It has the potential to treat many conditions like osteoarthritis and tendinitis.
Electroconvulsive therapy (ECT), also known as electroconvulsive therapy, is a widely-used treatment for severe major depression and other mental health disorders. Psychiatrists usually recommend ECT when other treatments don’t work or someone faces suicide risk.
A spinal cord injury can put your body into neurogenic shock, a serious condition in which your heart rate, blood pressure and temperature fluctuate rapidly. It poses an immediate danger since your organs don’t get the oxygen or nutrients they require to function properly.
Radial shock wave therapy alone is not as effective as combining it with stretching exercises for plantar fasciitis. Studies have demonstrated that patients who receive both treatments–radial shock wave therapy combined with stretching exercises–report significantly lower pain levels and greater improvement in function three months after receiving the combined therapy compared to those receiving just shock wave treatment.
Ultrasound differs from ESWT in that it produces both thermal and non-thermal effects on tissue being treated. It can be used to diagnose and monitor various medical conditions like sprains, strains and other injuries; additionally, it plays a significant role in many physical therapy regimens.