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510(k) Data Aggregation
(98 days)
Light therapy to provide topical heating for:
Temporary increase in local blood circulation Temporary relief of minor muscle and joint aches, pains and stiffness Relaxation of muscles Muscle spasms Minor pain and stiffness associated with arthritis
The Dynatron Tri-wave™ light pad and Dynatron Tri-wave™ light probe generate therapeutic topical heating treatments through the medium of multi-wavelength light energy to targeted tissue.
The Dynatron Tri-wave™ light pad is a bifurcated pad with two 5" x 7" treatment pads connected by a 24" cable between them and a 72" cable connecting to the Dynatron Solaris plus™ controlling console. The two pads accommodate treating both sides of a shoulder, elbow, knee, etc. or may be used side by side to treat larger areas such as the lower back.
The Dynatron Tri-wave™ light probe is designed with super luminous diodes emitting three different wavelengths of light. The Infrared LEDs have a wavelength of 850nm, the Red LEDs have a wavelength of 624nm and the Blue LEDs have a wavelength of 464nm. The light probe handle has an ergonomic design and is suited for treating small areas such as the hand, wrist or neck.
The provided text from K113250 describes a 510(k) premarket notification for the Dynatron Tri-wave™ light pad and probe. This document focuses on demonstrating substantial equivalence to predicate devices rather than proving specific performance against acceptance criteria in a clinical study for a new device.
Therefore, many of the typical questions regarding acceptance criteria, study design, sample sizes, expert ground truth, and MRMC studies are not applicable in the context of this 510(k) submission.
Here's an breakdown based on the information available:
1. A table of acceptance criteria and the reported device performance
This information is not provided in the document. The submission focuses on demonstrating substantial equivalence to predicate devices, which implies that the new device performs similarly and is as safe and effective as the already-cleared devices. No specific "acceptance criteria" in terms of numerical performance metrics (e.g., sensitivity, specificity, accuracy for a diagnostic device) are mentioned for the Dynatron Tri-wave™ light pad and probe. Its performance is implicitly accepted if it performs similarly to the predicate devices.
2. Sample sized used for the test set and the data provenance
Not applicable. This submission does not describe a new clinical performance study with a test set of data. It relies on the established safety and effectiveness of its predicate devices.
3. Number of experts used to establish the ground truth for the test set and the qualifications of those experts
Not applicable. There is no described test set requiring expert ground truth establishment.
4. Adjudication method for the test set
Not applicable. There is no described test set requiring adjudication.
5. If a multi reader multi case (MRMC) comparative effectiveness study was done, If so, what was the effect size of how much human readers improve with AI vs without AI assistance
Not applicable. This device is a light therapy device, not an AI-powered diagnostic or assistive tool. Therefore, an MRMC study and AI assistance are not relevant to this submission.
6. If a standalone (i.e. algorithm only without human-in-the-loop performance) was done
Not applicable. This device is a hardware device for light therapy, not an algorithm.
7. The type of ground truth used
Not applicable. As there is no de novo performance study, there is no ground truth established for the new device's performance against specific criteria. The ground truth, in a broader sense for this type of submission, is the established safety and effectiveness of the predicate devices.
8. The sample size for the training set
Not applicable. This device is a hardware device; machine learning training sets are not relevant here.
9. How the ground truth for the training set was established
Not applicable. As per point 8, there is no training set for this device.
Summary of the Study that Proves the Device Meets Acceptance Criteria (as per the 510(k) Submission):
The "study" in this context is the substantiation of substantial equivalence to legally marketed predicate devices, as documented in the 510(k) submission.
- Mechanism of Proof: The submission aims to prove that the Dynatron Tri-wave™ light pad and probe are substantially equivalent to the Dynatron Xp Infrared Pad (K051261) and D880 Infrared Probe (K031329), respectively.
- Basis for Equivalence:
- Intended Use/Indications For Use: The indications for use for the Dynatron Tri-wave™ devices are stated to be "consistent with the cleared indications for the predicate devices" (temporary increase in local blood circulation, temporary relief of minor muscle and joint aches, pains and stiffness, relaxation of muscles, muscle spasms, minor pain and stiffness associated with arthritis).
- Technological Characteristics: The new devices generate therapeutic topical heating through multi-wavelength light energy (Infrared, Red, Blue LEDs). While the predicate devices operate with one primary wavelength, the submission likely argues that the addition of wavelengths does not raise new questions of safety or effectiveness, or that the overall effect is still comparable. The controls and power mechanisms are stated to be the same as the predicate devices.
- Safety and Effectiveness: The submission states, "There are no substantive differences between the products defined in this 510(k) submission and the predicate devices. They are similar to the technologies that are currently used in other similar medical devices." It further mentions that the devices are developed under Dynatronics' Quality Management System, subject to design/change control, and verification/validation to applicable standards. This implies that the accepted safety and effectiveness of the "predicate" device's technology form the basis for accepting the new device's safety and effectiveness.
In essence, the acceptance criteria are largely centered on demonstrating that the new device is as safe and effective as the existing predicate devices, and that any technological differences do not introduce new safety or efficacy challenges. The "study" proving this is the careful comparison of the new device's specifications and intended use against those of the predicate devices.
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