Unfortunately, I do not rely as heavily as you do on research studies, and the explanation is simple.
Nothing unfortunate about it. Some therapists are strongly into correlating thier practice with research, others are not. It sounds as though you appraise the literature on occasion, at the very least.
I have learned over the years, in both performing research and studying research articles, that for every research article that proves one thing there are typically at least one other article that disproves the same thing. And before you discredit that statement, I ask you to please do a peer review of all ultrasound research articles.
I have.
You will find that there are more research articles that debunk the effectiveness of ultrasound than there are that support its use. (I have done this in the past and was quite surprised at what I found, it quite literally shook my understanding of PhysioTherapy and turned it upside-down) And despite this PTs all over the world rely heavily on ultrasound as an effective modality, and I believe rightfully so.
I respectfully disagree here. I think the modality has little, if any, clinical utility, and is widely overused by physiotherapists worldwide. The reasearch and my opinion are in absolute agreement on this. I haven't used an ultrasound for patient care in over a year, with no negative change in patient outcomes