Lateral Elbow Tendinopathy

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Tennis Elbow

Epidemiology

  • Prevalence of 1 to 3 in 100
  • Aged 35 - 54
  • Risk factors
    • o Tennis associated with condition in less than 10 in 100 patients
    • o Repetitive movements especially wrist extension and supination
    • o New or sudden overuse of tendon (e.g. lifting a new baby, new exercise routine, new gardening, handling heavy tools or heavy load)
    • o Low job control
    • o Low social support
    • o Doesn't increase risk: keyboard use, working with arms above shoulder-height, exposure to hand-transmitted vibrations

Pathogenesis

  • Repeated microtearing and healing attempts
  • Non inflammatory angiofibroblastic hyperplasia
  • Formation of nonfunctional blood vessels
  • Collagen scaffold disrupted by fibroblasts and vascular granulation

Diagnosis

  • Onset of pain is insidious
  • Diagnosed using the "Southampton examination schedule"
    • o All three of epicondylar pain, epicondylar tenderness, pain on resisted extension of the wrist
    • o Fairly accurate - sensitivity 73%, specificity 97%, kappa = 0.75
  • Often also get pain with supination of the forearm, resisted third finger extension (with an extended elbow), pain on lifting a chair with a pronated hand.
  • Can get wrist extension weakness
  • Range of motion usually normal
  • Imaging usually unnecessary, and extend of tendon damage is not correlated with the amount of pain. May be considered if no improvement.
  • Differential diagnosis of lateral elbow pain
    • o Osteomyelitis
    • o Arthritis
    • o Peripheral neuropathy
    • o Trauma
    • o Referred pain from neck,shoulder, wrist
    • o Posterior interosseous neuropathy
    • o Stress fracture
    • o Osteochondritis dissecans of capitellum and radius

Treatment

  • Most patients recover at one year with or without treatment
  • Rest, avoid or alter activities responsible for symptoms
  • For tennis players: lighter racket with smaller grip and less string tension, use 2 - handed backhand
  • Orthotics
    • o braces, forearm straps, wrist cock-up splints may reduce pain and improve function (level 2)
    • o Counter-force brace recommended as inexpensive and easy to use. Apply 6-10cm distal to elbow joint.
    • o
  • topical NSAIDs may help, inconsistent evidence for oral NSAIDs (level 2)
  • topical GTN may help for patients having physical therapy (level 2)
  • Injection platelet rich plasma (level 2)
  • Surgery
  • Peritendinous steroid injections may provide short-term relief (up to 12 weeks), but result in increased pain and recurrence at one year (level 1)
Complete recovery or much improvement at:        
Nothing Steroid Physio Steroid + physio
4 weeks 10% 71% 39% 68%
26 weeks 83% 56% 89% 54%
52 weeks 93% 84% 100% 82%
recurrence at 52w 20% 55% 5% 54%


  • o Acupuncture (level 2)
  • o
  • Physiotherapy
    • o May be no more effective or only slightly more effective than doing nothing at all, but studies are of poor quality.
    • o Expert opinion is to do daily eccentric isokinetic strengthening exercises
    • o Application of this technique for epicondylitis involves holding a weight or a taut resistance band with the wrist extended and then flexing the wrist while maintaining tension in the wrist extensors (ie, eccentrically contracting the wrist extensors)
    • o