Physical Therapy and Rehabilitation Services

At Physical Therapy Associates, service isn't just part of our name, it's one of our values….one of our goals. At PPTS the best people are providing the best care. Understanding the needs of our patients, physicians, staff and communities is essential. Physical Therapy Associates, in business since 2000, is a local company, owned by physical therapists that are committed to providing quality care, outstanding service and an uncompromising commitment to professional ethics..

Our mission is to preserve the public's choice of high quality, easily accessible and cost effective physical and occupational therapy services. Physical Therapy Associates is committed to our patients achieving their health and wellness goals. Providing therapy is not just a job to us-it is our profession, our career and our passion. Our vision is to present the community with physical therapy/rehabilitation clinics that are valley wide and geographically dispersed, owned and operated by physical therapists, providing outstanding clinical and customer service. This clinical network is supported by a well established central administrative services team that ensures the continuity of quality service.

Cold Laser Therapy

 

 

 

Low-level laser therapy (LLLT)

is a medical treatment that uses low-level lasers or light-emitting diodes to alter cellular function. LLLT is controversial in mainstream medicine with ongoing research to determine the ideal location of treatment (specifically whether LLLT is more appropriately used over nerves versus joints), dose, wavelength, timing, pulsing and duration.The effects of LLLT appear to be limited to a specified set of wavelengths of laser,and administering LLLT below the dose range does not appear to be effective.

Despite a lack of consensus over its ideal use, specific test and protocols for LLLT suggest it is effective in relieving short-term pain for rheumatoid arthritis,osteoarthritis acute and chronic neck pain,tendinopathy,and possibly chronic joint disorders.The evidence for LLLT being useful in the treatment of low back pain,dentistry and wound healing is equivocal.

LLLT has primarily been shown useful in the short-term treatment of acute pain caused by rheumatoid arthritis,osteoarthritis,tendinopathy,and possibly chronic joint disorders.LLLT has also been useful in the treatment of both acute and chronic neck pain.A Cochrane Library review concluded that low level laser therapy (LLLT) has insufficient evidence for treatment of nonspecific low back pain,a finding echoed in a later review of treatments for chronic low back pain.Though it has been suggested for decades that LLLT could be useful in speeding wound healing, the appropriate parameters (dose, type of laser, materials, wavelength, etc.) have not been identified.Similarly, the use of lasers to treat chronic periodontitisand to speed healing of infections around dental implantsis suggested, but there is insufficient evidence to indicate a use superior to traditional practices.

Stephen Barrett, writing for Quackwatch, concluded there was evidence to support LLLT use for temporary pain relief, but "there's no reason to believe that they will influence the course of any ailment or are more effective than other forms of heat delivery."

It is unclear how LLLT works. LLLT may reduce pain related to inflammation by lowering, in a dose-dependent manner, levels of prostaglandin E2, prostaglandin-endoperoxide synthase 2, interleukin 1-beta, tumor necrosis factor-alpha, the cellular influx of neutrophil granulocytes, oxidative stress, edema, and bleeding. The appropriate dose appears to be between 0.3 and 19 joules per square centimetre.Another mechanism may be related to stimulation of mitochondrion to increase the production of adenosine triphosphate resulting in an increase in reactive oxygen species, which influences redox signalling, affecting intracellular homeostasis or the proliferation of cells.The final enzyme in the production of ATP by the mitochondria, cytochrome c oxidase, does appear to accept energy from laser-level lights, making it a possible candidate for mediating the properties of laser therapy.

The effects of LLLT appear to be limited to a specified set of wavelengths of laser,and though more research is required to determine the ideal wavelengths, durations of treatment, dose and location of treatment (specifically whether LLLT is more appropriately used over nerves versus joints).Administering LLLT below the dose range does not appear to be effective.The factors of wavelength, effective dose, dose-rate effects, beam penetration, the role of coherence, and pulses (peak power and repetition rates) are still poorly understood in the clinical setting. The typical laser average power is in the range of 1-500 mW; some high-peak-power, short-pulse-width devices are in the range of 1-100 W with typical pulse-widths of 200 ns. The typical average beam irradiance then is 10 mW/cm2 - 5 W/cm2. The typical wavelength is in the range 600-1000 nm (red to near infrared), but some research has been done and products outside of this range are available.

 

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