Treatment Overview
Tennis elbow treatment is most often successful. The
most important part of treatment is tendon rest. A long rest from aggravating
activity allows the small tears in the tendon to heal. Depending on how severe
your condition is, you may need to rest your tendon for weeks to months.
Surgery is a last resort if other treatment isn't helpful.
Initial home treatment
Treatment for
tennis elbow works best when it starts as soon as
symptoms appear. If your condition is just developing, rest may be all you
need. However, in most cases, more treatment is necessary to protect and heal
the
tendon.
You can treat your tennis elbow by:
- Reducing pain. Use ice for pain during the
first 2 to 3 days after the injury. You can also take
non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, including ASA
(such as Aspirin) or ibuprofen (such as Advil). Do not give ASA
to anyone younger than 20 because of the risk of
Reye's syndrome, a serious illness. Acetaminophen
(such as Tylenol) can also help with pain.
- Stopping or changing
activities that may irritate the tendon. Learn new techniques for certain
movements, and use different equipment that may reduce the stress on your
forearm muscles.
Wrist and elbow splints can be used in the treatment of tennis
elbow. Splints are sometimes helpful for other bone, joint, and tendon
problems. But splints have not been shown to help with pain or recovery for
tennis elbow injuries.
Ongoing treatment
Over the first months of recovery from
tennis elbow, continue with initial treatment and
begin:
- Rehabilitation. After tennis elbow pain is
gone, you can start a rehabilitation program. This includes special exercises
for flexibility and arm muscle strength, and steps to improve overall fitness.
You may try:
- Wearing a special "counterforce" brace. This
strap, worn around your forearm just below the elbow, may spread pressure
throughout the arm instead of putting it all on the tendon. With a counterforce
brace, you may do some grasping and twisting activities. It won't help, though,
if you continue using a poor technique or the wrong equipment that originally
caused your tennis elbow. You don't need a health professional's advice before
trying a counterforce brace.
Treatment if the condition gets worse or does not improve
The longer you continue activity that harms the tendon after
tennis elbow symptoms begin, the longer rehabilitation
will take. This ongoing activity can cause severe
tendon damage and may ultimately require surgery. If
your symptoms are ongoing, your health professional may suggest:
- Corticosteroid
injections. This treatment is sometimes used when 6 to 8 weeks of rest and
rehabilitation doesn't relieve pain. However, corticosteroids may be harmful to
the tendon.2 This is usually only a problem after
having many injections in the same year.
- Ultrasound
therapy. Ultrasound may promote tendon healing and stop pain.
- Surgery, which is seldom used to treat tennis elbow (less than 5%
of cases).3 Surgery may be a treatment option if
persistent elbow pain doesn't improve after 6 to 12 months of tendon rest and
rehabilitation. Surgery usually involves cutting (releasing) the tendon,
removing damaged tissue from the tendon, or both. In some cases, tendon tears
can be repaired.
What To Think About
Your treatment choices will depend in part on whether elbow pain
affects your job or livelihood. It also depends on whether you are willing or
able to change habits or activities that are causing your elbow pain.
Non-surgical treatment is usually started if the injury
is:
- A result of overuse.
- A sudden
(acute) injury that doesn't have large tears in the tendon or other severe
damage in the elbow.
Most cases of tennis elbow respond to rest, ice, rehabilitation
exercises, pain medicine and splints. This injury does take from 6 months to 12
months to heal. Patience helps.
Surgery is considered as a last resort when all other
non-surgical treatments have failed. You may be referred for surgery
if:4
- The injury is from a sudden (acute) injury
that left large tears in the tendon or other severe damage in the
elbow.
- The injury is from chronic overuse and 6 to 12 months of
tendon rest and rehabilitation haven't relieved elbow pain. (If the tendon is
very weak, surgery may not improve your situation much.)
- Pain
continues despite other treatment.
- You have had a corticosteroid
shot and it hasn't helped.