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Tennis Elbow

Orthopedic Clinics of North America, 1973
Tennis elbow is an inflammation and/or rupture of the extensor aponeurosis at or about the lateral epicondyle. Relief of inflammation, improvement of strength, endurance, and flexibility of the injured extensor muscle unit, and diminution of the force loads in most instances will relieve symptoms.
H B, Boyd, A C, McLeod
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Tennis elbow.

BMJ clinical evidence, 2007
Lateral pain in the elbow affects up to 3% of the population, and is considered an overload injury of the extensor tendons of the forearm where they attach at the lateral epicondyle. Although usually self-limiting, symptoms may persist for over 1 year in up to 20% of people.We conducted a systematic review and aimed to answer the following clinical ...
Buchbinder, Rachelle   +2 more
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Tennis elbow

Postgraduate Medicine, 1989
Tennis elbow, or lateral epicondylitis, is a common condition of the elbow resulting from overuse during athletic or occupational activity. Functionally, it is a tendinitis of the origin of the forearm extensor muscle mass. Diagnosis is mainly based on symptoms and signs, including lateral elbow pain during twisting and gripping and tenderness at the ...
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Elbow tendinopathy: tennis elbow

Clinics in Sports Medicine, 2003
The pathoanatomy of overuse tendinopathy is noninflammatory angiofibroblastic tendinosis. The areas of elbow abnormality are specific, including the ECRB-EDC complex laterally, the pronator teres, flexor carpi radialis medially, and triceps posteriorly. The goals of nonoperative treatment are to revitalize the unhealthy pain-producing tendinosis tissue.
Robert P, Nirschl, Edward S, Ashman
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Elbow Tendinosis/Tennis Elbow

Clinics in Sports Medicine, 1992
The histology of pathologic tennis elbow tissue reveals noninflammatory tissue, thus the term angio-fibroblastic tendinosis. The goal of nonsurgical treatment is a revascularization and collagen repair of this pathologic tissue by rehabilitative exercise.
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Tennis elbow myths

BMJ, 2011
Orchard and Kountouris present a good summary of the evidence on so called tennis elbow, which is essentially that it’s a painful self-limiting condition that gets better spontaneously and is …
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