Regional hyperthermia combined with conventional irradiation could be a tool to improve local control in patients with NSCLC deeply invading the chest wall.
[Purpose] This study aimed to compare the efficacy of radiofrequency diathermy with that
of microwave diathermy in combination with intra-articular injection of hyaluronic acid
into the knee of patients with osteoarthritis (OA). [Subjects] A total of 17 patients with
knee OA were enrolled. The participants were randomly divided into two groups: a
radiofrequency diathermy group (RF group, 9 subjects), and a microwave diathermy group (MW
group, 8 subjects). [Methods] Subjects received radiofrequency or microwave thermal
therapy 3 times at 1-week intervals. Intra-articular injection of hyaluronic acid was
administered 10 min before every thermal therapy session. The outcome was evaluated using
the Japan Orthopaedic Association (JOA) and the Lequesne Index (LI) at baseline, at weeks
1 (1 week after the first thermal therapy) and 3 (1 week after the last thermal therapy).
[Results] The JOA scale increased significantly after three sessions of thermal therapy in
the RF group, while no significant increase was observed in the MW group. LI decreased
significantly after 3 weeks in the RF group. In the MW group, there was no significant
difference in LI between the two time points. [Conclusion] This study revealed that
symptom relief in patients with knee OA was greater with radiofrequency diathermy than
with microwave diathermy with concurrent use of hyaluronic acid injection, presumably due
to the different heating characteristics of the two methods.
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