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I'm starting to have pain in the elbow, from lifting, and everything points to tennis or golf elbow. What are some good exercises to help with the pain and recovery?

3 Answers 3

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Tennis elbow is usually caused by the tearing of tendons during eccentric contraction of muscles around the elbow. Last year, I got tennis elbow from using a kettle bell that was too heavy for me. The solution involves lengthening and strengthening the tendon.

The Theraband Flexbar is a grippy rubber bar which allows you to do the exact exercise you need to help this problem. I became very depressed reading about how some people never recover from tennis elbow, but after 1 day of using this tool, I started to feel relief. Complete recovery took about 2 months for me. I first read about it in the New York Times. I urge you to try this.

Make sure you know if you have tennis elbow or golf elbow first. These are injuries to different parts of your arm.

There are also two stretches that can help.

  1. Hold out your injured arm straight, with the palm facing down. With your other hand, pull your fingers down so your palm faces you.

  2. Hold out your injured arm with your palm up. With your other hand, pull your fingers down and towards your body so that the palm faces away from you.

These stretches felt good to me, and helped, but the exercise was the most important part.

Good luck, and please report back on success or failure.

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  • Nice awnser. I did not know the Thera Band 'till now.
    – Leo
    Commented Oct 27, 2011 at 7:48
  • Got the Thera-band and it help pretty quickly - quicker than I would have thought possible Commented Oct 29, 2011 at 17:38
  • I'm glad it is helping!
    – michael
    Commented Oct 30, 2011 at 12:46
  • @michael: Your Amazon link is broken. So what sorts of exercises does one do with this "Thera-band"?
    – Sean Duggan
    Commented Mar 15, 2016 at 15:01
  • @SeanDuggan Here is an updated link: amazon.com/TheraBand-Resistance-Improving-Strength-Tendonitis/… The exercise is hard to explain in text. You can see an example here youtube.com/watch?v=sJA_MmAS5ws
    – michael
    Commented Mar 15, 2016 at 15:10
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I have successfully rehabilitated from this injury and it can be quite a lot of work.

Rest is of course very important and depending on the severity of the injury, you may want to ice the area after working out. I would also recommend that you refrain from activity that causes the pain until you have completely rehabbed the arm. i.e. If there are certain lifts you feel might be the culprit, take those out of your workout until you are pain free. For me, it was upright rows and front raises. Hammer curls may also cause problems for some.

It seems this injury is actually caused by weakened forearm/grip muscles and aggravation of muscle fascia due to inflammation.

I experienced success by doing the following: On those days where I knew I was aggravating the injury (for me it was shoulder day), I began to incorporate a 10 minute forearm warmup. This involved forearm curls, reverse forearm curls and wrist rolls. I did this in place of the exercises where I felt the most pain. My session was once per week, but I'm sure you could do it more often if desired. After a few weeks of this rehab, I began to try the previously painful exercises using very light weight and experienced no pain. Soon, I was able to increase weight and eventually get my strength back to where it previously was and still be pain free. I would say all of this took about 6-8 months total. As I said, icing may help speed this process and help with soreness.

I now continue this regimen on my shoulder days as a warmup and I haven't had tennis elbow pain in a couple of years despite doing numerous types of upright rows and front raises.

If the above doesn't work for you, I would recommend going to a clinic that specializes in fascia repair to have a consultation. This was great for me when I tore my hip flexor and had difficulty making a comeback.

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In my experience I would say none. A tennis elbow is an inflammotory injury of your tendon that needs to rest. Keep it could and make shure you rest enough. You could also take a five day cure of an inflammation blocker while you are resting.

If you will not rest with this injury, it will only become worse...

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  • 2
    -1 I am down voting because there is a solution
    – michael
    Commented Oct 26, 2011 at 20:00
  • No prob. I never heard aout the Thera Band before. I don't think they sell it in Europe. Although I was actually talking about gym exercises ;)
    – Leo
    Commented Oct 27, 2011 at 7:46
  • Please proof read your answers before posting them.
    – MB41
    Commented Aug 14, 2015 at 14:44
  • A tennis elbow is NOT an inflammatory injury. Commented Jul 3, 2017 at 0:05

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