Therapeutic ultrasound (US) is a common treatment used in the rehabilitatio
n of injured muscle. To determine whether therapeutic US could increase the
content of heat shock protein (HSP) 72 in skeletal muscle, male Sprague-Da
wley rats were anesthetized and the muscles from one hind limb treated with
15 min of US at I MHz using either: 1. continuous US at 1.0 W/cm(2), 2. pu
lsed US at 2.0 W/cm(2) at 50% duty cycle, or 3. pulsed US at 1.0 W/cm2, at
20% duty cycle. All treatments were applied using a transducer (1.6-cm diam
eter) on an area of the rat hind limb twice the size of the sound head. At
24 h following treatment, the plantaris, soleus, white and red gastrocnemiu
s muscles were removed and assessed for HSP 72 content by Western blotting.
No significant increases in HSP 72 content were detected in any of the mus
cles examined following any US treatment. These results suggest muscle HSP
content is not elevated following a typical therapeutic dose of either cont
inuous or pulsed US in the rat. (C) 2001 World Federation for Ultrasound in
Medicine & Biology.