Radiothyreography

Radiothyreography is a modern method for diagnosing diseases and assessing the condition of the body using wide-range ultrasonic waves, which are generated based on discharges of a conventional surgical electrocoagulator.

The operating principle of this method is based on the effect of thermal accumulation of ultrasound in hard tissues, which, when interacting with the tissues of the human body, creates high-intensity ultrasound radiation and allows one to obtain indications about the pathological state of muscle fibers and internal organs. Thus, the radiotyregraphy method is based on the study of sound waves that arise as they pass through the tissues of the patient being studied.

The method, previously used exclusively in oncological research and planning surgical interventions on the heart and blood vessels, allows diagnosing diseases of the cardiovascular system, oncological diseases, pathologies of the musculoskeletal system, multiple sclerosis and other diseases with high accuracy and reliability of results.