Tennis/Golfer's Elbow

Symptoms and signs

Tennis
• Recurring pain on the lateral aspect elbow; occasionally, pain radiates down the arm toward the wrist.
• Localised tenderness extensor origin
• Increased pain on active and/or resisted wrist dorsiflexion
• Pain caused by lifting or bending the arm or grasping light objects.

Golfer's
• Recurring pain on the medial aspect elbow; occasionally, pain radiates down the arm toward the wrist.
• Localised tenderness flexor origin
• Increased pain on active and/or resisted wrist palmar flexion
• Pain caused by lifting or bending the arm or grasping light objects.

Both Tennis/Golfer's Elbow
• Difficulty extending or flexing the elbow fully
• Benign Self limiting conditions: Pain typically lasts for 6 – 12 months; the discomfort can continue for as little as 3 weeks or as long as several years. 90% people make a full recovery in a year.
• Women and men affected equally, peak incidence occurs between 35–54 years of age

Initial management

• Advice / reassurance / occasional analgesia & NSAIDs / topical anti-inflammatory as appropriate
• Modify loading
• Eccentric loading exercises advocated- refer MSK Physiotherapy
• Symptomatic measures (steroid injection (CSI) for short term symptomatic relief. Can be given by MSK Physiotherapist.
• Epicondylar clasp can be bought from Boots/ Allardyce/PhysioMed/online

Useful resources

Who to refer

  • Surgery may be considered if symptoms persist for more than a year with failure to respond to physiotherapy and at least 2 steroid injections

Who not to refer

  • Patients who have not had conservative treatment tried (Physiotherapy and at least 2 steroid injections

How to refer

  • If under the care of the TNHS MSK physiotherapy team, onward referral to UL service, if appropriate, will be organised by Physiotherapy service without the need for further GP intervention
  • SCI gateway/ Orthopaedic - Elbow and shoulder

Information to include when referring:
  • Duration of symptoms, dominance, effect on ADL, work, hobbies
  • Indicate site/spread of pain and if constant or intermittent, and/or waking at night
  • Include treatment to date (clasp/injections/ physiotherapy)