Radiofrequency vs. Ultrasound Therapy for Shoulder Joint in Stroke Patients: A Comparative Clinical Trial

NARecruitingINTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment

45

Participants

Timeline

Start Date

September 28, 2025

Primary Completion Date

November 12, 2025

Study Completion Date

November 12, 2025

Conditions
Stroke ( 3 Months After Onset)Stroke in Patients: New Tool to Evaluate the Impact in Their Life
Interventions
DEVICE

Radiofrequency

Radiofrequency (TECAR) therapy is a non-invasive, non-ablative treatment that uses electromagnetic energy to generate endogenous heat, promoting increased blood flow and tissue healing in both superficial and deep tissues. With a long wavelength and low frequency (300 KHz to 1 MHz), it can penetrate deeply into muscles, tendons, and bones, making it suitable even in acute conditions. TECAR operates in two modes: capacitive (targeting soft tissues rich in electrolytes) and resistive (targeting high-resistance tissues like bones and tendons). The therapy stimulates natural repair processes by inducing ion flow and micro-hyperemia, leading to the release of endorphins and cortisone, which help reduce pain, inflammation, and edema, while enhancing immune response and tissue regeneration.

DEVICE

Ultrasound

The ultrasound waves accelerate healing, increasing local vascularity and improving several other characteristics, including energy absorption capacity and maximum rupture resistance tension, increased collagen synthesis, fibroblast proliferation, release of growth factors stimulated by mast cell degranulation and improved response of platelets and macrophages anticipating the proliferative and remodeling phase. 1-MHz continuous ultrasound, with a half-value depth of approximately 2.3 cm, is frequently used to treat deep tissues that are approximately 2.3 to 5 cm deep.

OTHER

The designed physical therapy program

The designed physical therapy program focuses on improving upper limb mobility and stability through a structured set of exercises targeting the shoulder joint. It includes prolonged stretching performed in a seated position to extend the thumb, fingers, wrist, elbow, and shoulder, along with scapular mobilization in side-lying and stretching of internal rotators in a supine position. The stretching progression begins with external rotation at 45° abduction and advances to 90° abduction and full reach toward the ground if pain-free. Joint stabilization exercises involve resistance band movements in various shoulder and elbow positions, including controlled abduction, flexion, scapular movements, and external rotation, all aimed at enhancing joint control and muscular coordination.

Trial Locations (1)

Unknown

RECRUITING

Faculty of Physical Therapy Delta University, Gamasa

All Listed Sponsors
collaborator

Delta University for Science and Technology

OTHER

lead

Cairo University

OTHER