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Tennis
elbow (or lateral epicondylitis) generally starts out mild and gradually
gets worse. Chronic suffers can have severe pain that rarely lets
up. In chronic tennis elbow the pain is located at the outside of
the elbow below the joint's bony prominence. The patient experiences
pain if you reach and grip, lifting and carrying even a light object.
You
don't need to be a tennis player to suffer lateral epicondylitis.
In most cases "tennis elbow" is a result of repetitive
movements that require the forearm muscles to be engaged. It is
a common workplace or athletic injury.
Signs
and symptoms that your pain may be tennis elbow:
- Pain
caused by lifting, bending the arm or grasping even light objects
such as a coffee cup or a milk carton
- Pain
felt on or below the joint's bony prominence, can also be tender
to the touch
- There
can be recurring pain on the outside of the upper forearm just
below the bend of the elbow
- Pain
can radiate down the arm toward the wrist
- Difficulty
extending the forearm fully (because of inflamed muscles, tendons
and ligaments)
- Symptoms
usually develop insidiously and tend to get progressively worse
over time
- Pain
can occur when shaking hands, turning knobs, or lifting a suitcase
- There
can be a weakness of various muscles in shoulder, forearm, and
wrist
- There
can be a decrease in range of movement and flexibility in the
wrist.
- Muscle
spasms can occur in lower arm area
- There
is also what we refer to as "trigger point" pain. Meaning
the patient will have pain if the doctor presses at the site where
the tendon meets the bone.
Conditions
currently being treated by Excellence Shock Wave Therapy:
Achilles tendonitis | Plantar
Fasciitis (Heel spurs) | Shoulder
tendonitis | Tennis
elbow
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