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Tennis Elbow (Lateral Epicondylitis): Symptoms, Treatment, and Recovery in Bangladesh

Tennis elbow, also called lateral epicondylitis, is a painful condition affecting the tendons on the outer side of the elbow. In my practice, I often see people assume this problem happens only to tennis players, but that is not true. Many patients in Bangladesh develop tennis elbow from repeated hand, wrist, and forearm use during office work, teaching, tailoring, manual labor, household activity, gym exercise, or using tools for long periods. [1][2]

The condition usually develops gradually. Pain often starts as mild discomfort on the outer side of the elbow and then worsens over weeks or months. Many patients notice difficulty when gripping objects, lifting a kettle, carrying shopping bags, turning a doorknob, shaking hands, or even holding a mobile phone for a long time. [1][2]

One important point I want Bangladeshi patients to understand is that tennis elbow is not usually a major joint injury. It is more often an overuse problem involving the tendon attachment of the forearm extensor muscles, especially near the lateral epicondyle of the elbow. With the right diagnosis, activity adjustment, rehabilitation, and patience, most people improve without surgery. [1]

What Is Tennis Elbow?

Tennis elbow is a condition affecting the tendons that help extend the wrist and fingers. These tendons attach to the bony prominence on the outside of the elbow, called the lateral epicondyle. Repetitive strain can lead to microscopic damage in this area and cause pain, tenderness, and reduced grip strength. [1]

Although the name sounds sports-specific, many patients who develop tennis elbow have never played tennis. In Dhaka, I frequently think about practical triggers such as:
– repeated typing with poor desk setup
– lifting or carrying items with the wrist extended
– repetitive use of screwdrivers, pliers, or hand tools
– salon or tailoring work
– childcare tasks such as lifting a child repeatedly
– gym training with poor form
– prolonged cooking, cleaning, or wringing cloth by hand

That is why the treatment plan has to fit the patient’s real daily routine rather than only the medical label.

Common Symptoms of Lateral Epicondylitis

The symptoms usually build up slowly rather than starting with one dramatic injury. [1][2]

Pain on the Outer Side of the Elbow

The most common complaint is pain or burning over the outer elbow. Some patients can point to one exact spot. Others feel the pain spread down the forearm.

Weak Grip Strength

Many patients tell me, “Doctor, my hand feels weak even though I can move it.” Grip weakness is common because gripping activities load the painful tendon area. [1]

Pain During Everyday Tasks

Pain may worsen with:
– lifting a cup or jug
– opening jars
– shaking hands
– turning a key
– carrying a bag
– using a computer mouse for long periods
– playing racket sports
– wringing clothes
– repetitive cutting or chopping work

Night Discomfort

Some people feel pain at night, especially after a heavy-use day. This does not always mean the condition is severe, but it does suggest the tendon is being irritated repeatedly. [1]

Why Tennis Elbow Happens

Tennis elbow usually develops because of overuse rather than a single major injury. The tendon becomes stressed by repetitive wrist extension, gripping, and twisting motions. [1][2]

Repetitive Overload

When the same forearm motions are repeated again and again, the tendon may not recover properly between activities. Over time, the tissue becomes painful.

Technique and Posture Problems

In sports, poor backhand technique or equipment issues may contribute. In day-to-day life, poor work posture, poorly positioned keyboards, repetitive heavy gripping, and awkward lifting technique can all make symptoms worse.

Age Group and Work Demands

Tennis elbow is common in active adults, especially when work or household tasks involve repetitive forearm strain. In Bangladesh, patients may continue working through pain because stopping work is not practical. That often turns an early, mild problem into a more persistent one.

How I Assess Tennis Elbow

When I evaluate patients with outer elbow pain, I do not assume it is tennis elbow immediately. Several other problems can mimic it, so careful assessment matters.

History Taking

I ask:
– where exactly the pain is located
– what activities bring it on
– whether the patient has neck pain, numbness, or tingling
– whether there was any trauma
– whether grip weakness is the main problem
– how long the pain has been present
– what work or household tasks are repetitive

This helps me separate tendon-related pain from nerve problems, arthritis, instability, or referred pain from the neck.

Physical Examination

On examination, I check for tenderness over the lateral epicondyle and assess pain during resisted wrist or finger extension. I also examine the neck, shoulder, elbow movement, and nerve function, because not every elbow pain is really coming from the elbow. [1]

When Tests May Be Needed

Most uncomplicated tennis elbow cases do not need many tests at the beginning. But if symptoms are unusual, severe, prolonged, or not improving, X-rays, MRI, or nerve tests may be considered to rule out arthritis, nerve compression, or other conditions. [1]

Treatment of Tennis Elbow

Most patients improve with nonsurgical treatment. In my practice, I usually explain that recovery depends not only on medicine but also on changing the activity pattern that keeps irritating the tendon. [1]

Rest Does Not Mean Complete Inactivity

The first step is reducing or modifying the movements that trigger pain. That does not mean complete bed rest or avoiding all arm use. It means stopping the specific overload.

For example, in Dhaka or elsewhere in Bangladesh, that may mean:
– reducing heavy household chores for a short period
– taking breaks from long keyboard sessions
– changing the height of the desk or chair
– using both hands for lifting
– avoiding repeated twisting with one arm
– asking family members to help with heavy tasks during a flare

Pain Relief

Elbow Care by Dr. Md. Iftekharul Alam

Simple pain relief medicines may help some patients, but they should be used sensibly and with medical advice, especially in people with kidney disease, gastric ulcer risk, or other medical conditions. Ice after painful activity may also help temporarily. [2][3]

Bracing

A forearm strap or counterforce brace may reduce strain on the tendon in some patients. It is not a cure by itself, but it can be useful during rehabilitation or while returning gradually to work. [1]

Physiotherapy and Exercise

Physiotherapy is often one of the most important parts of treatment. I usually explain to my patients that healing a tendon requires a structured plan, not just passive treatments.

Stretching and Mobility

Gentle stretching of the wrist extensor muscles may help improve comfort and movement.

Strengthening

Progressive strengthening, especially eccentric loading programs, is commonly used in rehabilitation for tennis elbow. Exercises need to be done correctly and progressed gradually. [1][4]

Movement Correction

If the patient’s work setup or lifting technique keeps irritating the tendon, symptoms often return. In local practice, I pay attention to practical habits:
– how a patient holds tools
– mouse and keyboard position
– whether the wrist stays extended for long periods
– whether repetitive gripping can be distributed differently
– whether travel fatigue and long work hours are limiting recovery

Injections and Other Procedures

Some persistent cases may be treated with injection-based options, but these need careful patient selection. Steroid injections may reduce pain temporarily, but they are not the right solution for everyone and should not be used casually. Excessive use may weaken soft tissue over time. [1]

Other treatments, including platelet-rich plasma or other procedures, may be considered in selected cases, but the decision should be based on clinical evaluation rather than marketing claims.

When Surgery Is Considered

Most people with tennis elbow do not need surgery. Surgery is usually considered only when:
– symptoms persist for a long period despite proper treatment
– daily function remains significantly affected
– the diagnosis is clear
– structured rehabilitation has already been tried seriously

Even when surgery is discussed, the aim is to remove unhealthy tendon tissue and restore function, not simply to “fix pain instantly.” [1]

Recovery Expectations

One of the biggest frustrations for patients is that tennis elbow can take time to improve. Tendon recovery is often gradual, and pain may fluctuate.

What I Usually Tell Patients

I usually explain to my patients that improvement often comes in stages:
– first, pain during daily tasks becomes less frequent
– then grip becomes stronger
– then they can return more comfortably to work, exercise, or sport

Some patients feel better in a few weeks, while others need a longer rehabilitation period. Rushing back into the same painful activity too early is a common reason for recurrence.

Bangladesh-Specific Recovery Challenges

In Bangladesh, recovery may be affected by:
– long commuting time
– inability to avoid manual tasks completely
– limited access to regular physiotherapy
– pressure to return quickly to work
– using one dominant arm for nearly all chores

For this reason, I try to keep treatment realistic. The best plan is the one a patient can actually follow.

When Tennis Elbow May Not Be the Only Problem

Not every outer elbow pain is simple lateral epicondylitis. If the pain is associated with numbness, neck pain, hand weakness, locking, major swelling, or an injury history, I think more broadly.

Other possibilities can include:
– nerve compression
– neck-related referred pain
– elbow arthritis
– ligament instability
– other tendon or muscle injury

That is why self-treatment for months without diagnosis is not always wise.

Urgent Warning Signs

Tennis elbow itself is usually not an emergency, but urgent medical assessment is important if elbow or arm pain comes with:
– sudden severe swelling after trauma
– inability to move the arm after a fall
– obvious deformity
– fever or redness suggesting infection
– progressive numbness or major weakness in the hand
– severe neck pain with arm symptoms
– loss of hand circulation, unusual coldness, or color change

These features suggest that the problem may be something more serious than routine tennis elbow.

Preventing Recurrence

After symptoms improve, prevention becomes very important.

Practical Prevention Tips

I recommend:
– warming up before sports or gym activity
– improving racket, grip, or lifting technique if relevant
– avoiding repeated heavy gripping without breaks
– adjusting desk and chair position
– strengthening the forearm and shoulder muscles gradually
– using the whole upper limb rather than overloading the wrist and forearm
– increasing activity step by step instead of suddenly doing too much

For office workers and students in Dhaka, even small ergonomic changes can make a meaningful difference over time.

My Final Advice

In my practice, I often see tennis elbow become more stubborn because patients either ignore it for too long or expect one quick treatment to solve everything. The truth is usually somewhere in between. This is a very real and painful problem, but with the right diagnosis, smart activity modification, structured rehabilitation, and patience, most patients improve well.

One important point I want Bangladeshi patients to understand is that persistent outer elbow pain should not be normalized just because you are busy or because the work seems unavoidable. If pain is affecting your grip, work performance, sleep, or daily household function, a proper orthopedic assessment can help you recover more safely and avoid chronic tendon pain.

Related Topics

References

  1. American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons (AAOS) OrthoInfo. Tennis Elbow (Lateral Epicondylitis). https://orthoinfo.aaos.org/en/diseases–conditions/tennis-elbow-lateral-epicondylitis/
  2. Mayo Clinic. Tennis elbow: Symptoms and causes. https://www.mayoclinic.org/diseases-conditions/tennis-elbow/symptoms-causes/syc-20351987
  3. NHS. Tennis elbow. https://www.nhs.uk/conditions/tennis-elbow/
  4. AAOS OrthoInfo. Therapeutic Exercise Program for Epicondylitis. https://orthoinfo.aaos.org/en/recovery/epicondylitis-therapeutic-exercise-program/

FAQs BY PATIENTS

The best first step is a proper clinical assessment so the real cause of the pain, weakness, or movement problem can be identified instead of guessing from symptoms alone.

Many orthopedic problems can initially be managed without surgery, but the decision depends on the diagnosis, severity, and how much the problem is affecting daily life.

You should seek urgent medical attention if there is severe pain after trauma, sudden loss of movement, major swelling, fever, or progressive numbness or weakness.

Repeated lifting, awkward posture, overhead work, long periods without movement, and ignoring early pain often make orthopedic symptoms worse. The exact triggers depend on the condition and should be discussed during assessment.

If pain keeps returning, daily function is getting worse, weakness or numbness is appearing, or sleep is regularly disturbed, it is sensible to get a proper orthopedic evaluation rather than waiting for the problem to settle on its own.

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