Your Health & Lifestyle Wellbeing Magazine

Lateral epicondylitis aka tennis elbow

Tennis elbow is a painful condition caused by an overuse of forearm muscles. As the popular name suggests, playing tennis is one of the most common cause of this condition. But it can be triggered by other strenuous activities, such as decorating or playing violin.

What are the symptoms of tennis elbow?

Pain is the most common symptom. It is localised on the outside of the elbow, around the bony “lump”. The lump is called epicondyle and the medical term “lateral epicondylitis” means inflammation of the outside epicondyle. By the way, inflammation of the medial (inside) epicondyle is commonly known as a golfer elbow. The epicondyle can be painful to touch and the pain is triggered by using the forearm muscles, i.e. lifting, picking up and so on.

What are the treatments?

The NHS website recommends non-steroidal anti-inflammatory painkillers (NSAIDs) and steroid injections. None of those is recommended by us. Both NSAIDs and steroids can reduce inflammation but none of them will address the actual problem which is muscle tendon injury / damage. Our goal is to heal the injury. It is the only way to achieve long term effect and lasting improvement. In Algocells we use concentrated blood platelets (PRP) for damaged or injured tendons. PRP provide a vast amount of growth factors and anti-inflammatory molecules which help healing. A recently published systematic review (https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/pmrj.12287) showed a superior long term effect of PRP compared to steroid in the management of lateral epicondylitis.

If you suffer from pain caused by lateral (or medial) epicondylitis, suffer no more! Please, contact us, schedule an appointment (face to face or via video link) and have your tennis (golfer) elbow treated.

Author

  • Zbig Kirkor

    Dr Kirkor is a Consultant in Pain Medicine and a Managing Director of Algocells, the only Regenexx clinic in Europe. He qualified from Medical University in Gdansk, Poland in 1987. He completed his formal training in anaesthesia in 1994 and he held several consultant posts in Poland. He obtained his PhD in medicine in 1996. He moved to the UK in 2005 and he joined Pain Clinic at Stoke Mandeville Hospital (National Spine Injury Centre). In September 2010 he moved to Telford, Shropshire. Dr Kirkor’s special interest is interventional pain medicine, interventional medicine in MSK conditions, spine pain, whiplash injury, Whiplash-Associated Disorders and Complex Regional Pain Syndrome. Dr Kirkor is a member of Spine Interventions Society (Membership Committee Member), North American Spine Society and Interventional Orthopaedic Foundation. He is an Associate Fellow of The Royal College of Anaesthetists. Dr Kirkor is a medico-legal expert witness and his area of expertise is anaesthesia and chronic pain. He is a member of the Expert Witness Institute (MEWI). He won The Anaesthesia & Pain Medicine Consultant of the Year 2017 Award (The Lawyers Monthly Magazine).