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Tennis Elbow (Lateral Epicondylitis)

Outer-elbow pain with grip and lifting — loading exercise, not injections, wins long-term.

Overview

Tennis elbow is pain over the bony bump on the outside of the elbow, where the tendons that extend the wrist and fingers attach. Despite the name, fewer than one in ten cases come from racquet sports — it’s mostly a condition of gripping work: typing, tools, lifting, cooking, carrying. The tendon becomes overloaded and degenerative rather than truly inflamed, which is why the modern name is lateral elbow tendinopathy.

Two facts shape good treatment. First, most cases recover fully — but slowly, over months, and faster with the right loading programme. Second, the classic corticosteroid injection is a trap: trials show it relieves pain briefly but produces worse outcomes and more recurrences at one year than doing almost anything else. ACTYMED’s approach is the evidence-based one — progressive loading, dry needling, manual therapy and activity modification — with honest timelines.

Signs & Symptoms

  • Pain over the outer bony point of the elbow
  • Pain gripping, lifting or twisting — kettle, handshake, screwdriver
  • Ache spreading down the top of the forearm
  • Weak or painful grip
  • Morning stiffness at the elbow
  • Tenderness pressing the outer elbow

Causes

  • Repetitive gripping work — tools, kitchen, keyboard and mouse
  • Sudden spikes in gripping or lifting load
  • Racquet sports with technique or equipment issues
  • Direct strain from a single heavy pull or lift
  • Age-related tendon change concentrated at the attachment
  • Neck and nerve contributions in some persistent cases

Risk Factors

  • Age 35-55
  • Repetitive-grip occupations and hobbies
  • Sudden new activity — renovation, gardening spree, new gym programme
  • Racquet sports with poor grip size or heavy strings
  • Smoking and diabetes slow tendon recovery
  • Previous episode of the same problem

Understanding the Anatomy

The common extensor tendon anchors the muscles that lift the wrist and fingers to the lateral epicondyle — the outer bony bump of the elbow. One small anchor point serves every grip you make.

Under repeated overload the tendon's collagen becomes disorganised — a degenerative change (tendinosis) rather than classic inflammation — which is why anti-inflammatory strategies alone underperform, and progressive loading, which stimulates collagen remodelling, works.

The radial nerve passes close by and the neck refers pain to the same zone, so thorough assessment always looks beyond the tendon.

Types & Classification

  • Acute overload — recent onset after unaccustomed activity
  • Chronic tendinopathy — persistent beyond 3 months with degenerative change
  • Work-related vs sport-related patterns
  • With or without associated nerve irritation or neck referral

How We Diagnose It

  • Point tenderness at the lateral epicondyle
  • Pain with resisted wrist and middle-finger extension
  • Grip strength testing — often measurably reduced
  • Neck and radial nerve screening to exclude mimics
  • Ultrasound reserved for atypical or stubborn cases
  • X-ray only if joint pathology is suspected

If Left Untreated

  • Persistent pain lasting 12-18+ months without structured care
  • Progressive grip weakness affecting work and daily tasks
  • Recurrence with premature return to full load
  • Compensatory shoulder and wrist overuse
  • Higher recurrence rates after repeated corticosteroid injections

The ACTYMED Advantage

  • Evidence-honest from the first visit: we explain why the quick-fix injection has the worst one-year record
  • Progressive loading programme dosed from your measured grip strength
  • Dry needling of the overworked forearm muscles for faster comfort
  • Work and sport modification that keeps you productive during recovery
  • Neck and nerve screening built in — mimics are caught early
  • Measured grip-strength re-testing shows recovery in numbers

How We Treat It

Recovery & Prognosis

  • Meaningful improvement typically within 6-12 weeks of progressive loading
  • Full resolution commonly takes 3-6 months — tendons remodel slowly
  • Grip strength recovery is tracked and usually leads the last of the pain
  • Most people work throughout with sensible modification
  • Recurrence is uncommon when the final loading phase is completed

Prevention Tips

  • Build grip-heavy activity up gradually
  • Vary tasks — break up long repetitive gripping
  • Use palm-up lifting where possible
  • Check racquet grip size and string tension
  • Keep forearm, shoulder and grip strength maintained
  • Address neck stiffness that sensitises the arm

Home Care & Self-Management

Do's

  • Keep using the arm within comfortable limits
  • Do the loading exercises daily as prescribed
  • Use a counterforce brace for provocative work if advised
  • Warm the forearm before heavy grip sessions
  • Lift with palm up when you can

Don'ts

  • Don't grip-test the elbow repeatedly to check the pain
  • Avoid complete rest — the tendon deconditions
  • Don't accept repeated steroid injections as a plan
  • Avoid heavy palm-down lifting during the irritable phase
  • Don't abandon rehab the week the pain stops — finish the strength build

Frequently Asked Questions

Why does my elbow hurt when I grip things?

The muscles that grip and stabilise your wrist all anchor to that one small spot on the outer elbow. Every grip transmits force through the irritated tendon — which is why even lifting a kettle or shaking hands can sting.

Will it heal on its own?

Often yes, but slowly — untreated cases commonly grumble for 12–18 months. A structured loading programme meaningfully shortens the journey and reduces recurrence, which is the real value of treatment.

Should I get a steroid injection?

The evidence says be very cautious: a landmark randomised trial (Coombes et al., JAMA, 2013) found corticosteroid injection led to worse one-year outcomes and higher recurrence than placebo. Short-term relief, long-term cost. We reserve injections for rare, carefully discussed situations.

What treatment actually works?

Progressive strengthening of the wrist extensors and grip — starting light and building systematically — plus dry needling of the overworked forearm muscles, manual therapy, and adjusting the loads that keep re-irritating it. A counterforce brace can ease symptoms during work.

How long until I’m better?

Expect meaningful improvement in 6–12 weeks of consistent loading, with full resolution commonly taking 3–6 months. Tendons rebuild on tendon time — but function returns much earlier than the last twinge disappears.

Can I keep working with tennis elbow?

Almost always. We modify grip sizes, tool handles, lifting technique (palm-up where possible), and break up repetitive gripping — keeping you working while the tendon adapts.

Is it ever something other than tennis elbow?

Yes — neck-referred pain, radial nerve irritation and elbow joint problems can mimic it. That’s why we screen the neck and nerve pathways before labelling any outer-elbow pain.

Does dry needling help tennis elbow?

Trials and reviews support needling of the forearm trigger points as a useful adjunct — it reduces pain and muscle overactivity so the loading programme can progress. It complements the exercise; it doesn’t replace it.

When is surgery indicated for tennis elbow?

Rarely — roughly nine in ten cases resolve without it. Surgery is considered only after 6–12 months of properly completed loading rehabilitation has genuinely failed, and even then results are mixed enough that guidelines treat it as a true last resort. Before any operation, the honest first question is whether the loading programme was actually completed — most “stubborn” tennis elbows turn out to be under-rehabilitated, not surgical.

What the Evidence Says

  • Randomised trial (Coombes et al., JAMA 2013): corticosteroid injection produced worse one-year outcomes and more recurrence than placebo — a caution now built into guidelines
  • Landmark trial (Smidt et al., The Lancet 2002) showed physiotherapy outperformed injections beyond the short term
  • Progressive loading is the accepted core treatment for lateral elbow tendinopathy in current reviews
  • Dry needling shows benefit as an adjunct for lateral epicondylalgia in systematic reviews

Specialists Who Can Help

Dr. Ajeesh T Alex

Dr. Ajeesh T Alex

Ayurvedic Orthopaedics & Sports Medicine

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