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  1. #1
    Registered User orsum's Avatar
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    tennis elbow / tendonitis treatment

    Tennis elbow treatments and exercises: Between 10 and 50 per cent of players suffer from tennis elbow. Here's what science says about tennis elbow treatments and preventing tennis elbow.
    What are the latest treatments and exercises for dealing with this minor scourge?
    Before seeking to eradicate the symptoms, you first need to be aware of the tissues you have injured. The elbow is a hinge joint, allowing both flexion and extension. Functional stability in your elbow is gained through its bony anatomy and its ligaments (Noteboom et al, 1994). We are purely concerned with the lateral (outside) aspect of the elbow. Tennis elbow involves injury to the extensor muscles of your forearm and its tendinous origin.

    There is more than one joint involved in movements at your elbow. The joint utilises three articulations (how the three bones of the arm move against each other) to allow movement at the elbow joint. The three bones in question are the humerus (upper arm) and the radius and ulna (bones of the forearm). The radio-ulnar joint is most crucial in this injury as it plays a role in pronation (turning the palm of your hand towards the floor) and supination (turning the palm of your hand away from the floor. The humerus's two condyles (found at the far end of the humerus) give articulating surfaces at your elbow joint (Noteboom et al, 1994). Above the condyles are the medial and lateral epicondyles. It is the lateral epicondyle where you will find the origin for the extensor-supinator group (forearm muscles that provide extension and supination). Your forearm extensor muscles are in action during wrist extension and are particularly important in the backhand stroke. Tennis involves repeated gripping and twisting movements, which work your extensor muscles.

    Why tennis elbow happens
    Tennis elbow injuries mostly occur if repetitive micro-trauma is placed on the tissues in question. The micro-trauma involves forces that the tissues are unable to cope with. These forces can be worsened by several predisposing factors. if you suddenly increase your playing intensity coupled with a poor technique - essentially the backhand - you reduce your body's ability to withstand these forces.

    There are many factors that can lead to tennis elbow:
    1 If the amount of external rotation in your shoulder is restricted, it can lead to extra strain being placed on the elbow (Bender, 1994)
    2 An overuse injury during wrist extension can occur if your extensor carpi radialis brevis (forearm muscle involved in wrist extension) takes on the role of flexing the elbow ahead of the biceps (Bender, 1994)
    3 A lack of mobility in your back (Bender, 1994)
    4 Poor flexibility (Kelley, 1994)

    Tennis elbow treatments
    If you are suffering from tennis elbow, you will most likely have pain radiating down the lateral side of your elbow or stiffness in this area. Your symptoms may disappear if you stop playing, but this is obviously self-defeating. Other primary treatments can include anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), injections, and by following the RICE (rest, ice, compression and elevation) method. These, however, merely treat the symptoms and don't address the underlying factors that caused the injury.
    Noteboom (1994) categorises five stages of treatments for tennis elbow:
    1. Reduce pain
    2. Reduce inflammation
    3. Induce the healing process
    4. Maintain fitness
    5. Control force placed on injured tissues.

    To follow the latter, of course, you must first get an accurate diagnosis, pinpointing the injured tissues. Physiotherapy is needed, both for this and to explain how to reduce the contributory forces being placed on your elbow.

    Tennis elbow exercises and rehabilitation
    Stretching your forearm extensors is important in establishing a full range of motion and in achieving alignment during tissue repair. Begin your first stretch by extending your arm with the palm of your hand facing downwards and then pull your hand upwards towards your forearm. The second stretch is a reversal of this, meaning that you pull your hand downwards towards the underside of your forearm. If this stretch proves painful, simply keep your arm bent during the stretch to reduce the intensity (Hannafin & Schelkun, 1996).

    As you begin to show signs of improvement, resistance exercises can be added. The weight should be light at first, perhaps with dynabands being used before progressing to dumbbells. Wrist curls are a good exercise that works the underside of the forearm muscles. Grasp a dumbbell in each hand and sit down. Then lay your forearms on your thighs with your hands dangling over your knees, your palms facing upwards. Begin your first repetition by curling the weight upwards at the wrist and then slowly lowering. A similar exercise to work the tops of your forearms can be performed by starting with your palms facing downwards. Initially, three sets of 10 repetitions should be performed daily; once you achieve 25 reps, add an extra two-kilogram weight (Hannafin & Schelkun, 1996).

    You could also include isometric exercises. The first requires you to squeeze a tennis ball in the palm of your hand and hold it momentarily before releasing. The second is a rubber band exercise, where the band should be placed at your fingertips. Start the exercise by extending your fingers outwards and then hold for a few seconds before releasing. Aim to perform these exercises twice a day.

    Once your overall strength improves, other elbow extension exercises can be included where appropriate.

    Neil Coulton

    ===============================================

    For many amateur racket-sport athletes, elbow tendonitis or ?tennis-elbow? is an all too frequent injury ? often resulting in stiffness, soreness, and outright pain.
    Basically, elbow tendonitis is an overuse injury caused by repeated contractions of muscles connected to the elbow joint of the arm used to hit the ball. Stress on the elbow is inevitable, because some of the force created when the ball hits the racket automatically passes from the racket into the forearm and then to the elbow. This repeated impact produces trauma to the tissues surrounding the elbow, leading to inflammation and soreness.
    Elbow tendonitis can be classified as either 'backhand tennis elbow' or 'forehand tennis elbow'. Backhand elbow is usually caused by lack of strength in the extensor muscles of the forearm (the muscles which attach on the outer side of the elbow) and/or by poor technique, hence why amateur players are the worse sufferers of the condition.
    Forehand tennis elbow is less common among novice players, primarily because the average tennis participant's inside-elbow muscles are stronger than the outside-elbow ones. However, professional players are at high risk for the malady, because their attempts to put spin on the ball (for topspin forehands and spin serves) lead to excessive action at the wrist, which in turn strains the elbow on the inside
    The frequency of elbow tendonitis increases with age and the number of years of play. Sadly for veterans, it takes longer to correct in older players too also.

    1.Strength train your wrist muscles, as well as the muscles on the inside and outside of the elbow. For the wrists, good exercises include squeezing a tennis ball and doing wrist curls and extensions with a dumbbell
    2.Carry out stretching exercises for the wrist muscles and muscles on the outside and inside of the elbow after you play, or after a warm-up which includes light hitting of the ball
    3.Avoid playing more than four times a week, and if soreness appears after a game, don't play again until the pain disappears.

    Further useful ideas
    1.Ice down your sore elbow, keeping the ice on for 10- to 12-minute intervals, with 20-minute rests between applications
    2.Use oral anti-inflammatory medications as directed by your doctor
    3.Apply anti-inflammatory creams to the elbow joint
    4.As directed by your doctor, use Transcutaneous Electrical Nerve Stimulation (TENS) treatments, which have been shown to reduce pain and inflammation in scientific studies
    5.Once the pain subsides, try using a 'counter brace band' when you play. This band, which fastens around your forearm no closer than one inch below the elbow joint, slightly changes the angle of pull on elbow tendons, helps distribute impact forces at the elbow, and is believed to absorb some of the shock

    Just thought this may help others, this is my problem on the nose ok not the tennis part but the pain, still hurting but getting better its been about 5 weeks now and at the rate its clearing it will be another 5 weeks before i can get back into the weight training.

    orsum
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  2. #2
    4 8 15 16 23 42 marblehead's Avatar
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    Thats about the best/most in depth description of it as I have seen.

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  3. #3
    Registered User IBigBoy's Avatar
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    bumping for future help.

    thanks
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  4. #4
    Physiotherapist Fresch's Avatar
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    That looks like a cut and paste from a pre- 2000 article. Science has moved on a lot since then and a lot of the material in that post is now out of date and inaccurate.
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  5. #5
    Registered User Gmedlo's Avatar
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    **** so apparently I can't play more than 4 times a week or I'll get tennis elbow. The person that wrote this realizes that pretty much every competitive player plays nearly every day of the year, right?
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