Cure for tendonitis

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EMW14

New member
I've had chronic tendonitis in my elbows - medial epichondilitis, "golfer's elbow" - for years. It flares up badly once in a while. The last episode was terrible. I've had cortisone shots for it in the past but have reached my lifetime limit of those.

So, the sports medicine doc I saw about it most recently had me start doing grip strength exercises: wrist curls, primarily, but in every direction, and specifically with dumbbells. "Underhand", "overhand" and also laterally, in both directions. I also made up an exercise which is supposed to mimic the action of stickhandling with a hockey stick, as this is usually what flares it up the worst. I hold a pair of hex dumbbells by the hex with arms in front as if doing hammer curls and roll the dumbbells side to side.

Anyway, 20 reps each exercise every single day. Sounds like a big PITA, but I have a home gym, and I can do the whole routine in about 6 minutes if I don't take any breaks.

I started out very light: doc said to start with a weight that I could barely feel any pain with after 10 reps. That meant I had to start wrist curls with 12 lbs, my elbow hurt that much. I'm now up to 35 lbs and while there's still a little discomfort at times, it's mild and I can play hockey pretty much pain free. I had to quit playing hockey, I stopped training back, stopped training biceps, anything that required gripping and pulling. I'm back to regular training and making gains again!

I also jump started the recovery with a round of IGF-1, which I did 100 mcg a day, including a couple shots directly into the injured tendon. This had a very positive effect and I think I'm going to try another round of it to see if I can get rid of the lingering, minor soreness that remains.

I hope someone else who has this problem reads this; I'd been told and tried all the typical things, including rest, ice, a compression bandage, tennis/golfer's elbow "sleeve", etc. None of that bullshit worked at all. My next option was surgery, which I wasn't excited about at all.
 
I know exactly what your saying here. I lose complete grip in my hands when this happens. Will set there and just throb in bed at night or whenever I sleep. Mine will flare up about once a year. I really keep the arms working alot now so its not so bad recently. Maybe this is similar to what the Dr. said for you to do. But im just lifting really. I have noticed that a break from the gym or if I go light for a while then heavy it will come back. Gotta keep everything moving or it will get stiff and hurt, that's what ive figured out. People will say as they age that getting around is harder, but for most ie(no injuries) are just dormant in there everyday activities and this causes them to be come stiff and feeble.
 
Tennis elbow aka Tendonitus sucks! Only thing that ever healed mine was rest, and i mean complete rest! I had it linger for months and months until i totally layer off it
 
oh and oddly enough, when it was at its worse, the light weight is what hurt it more so then going heavy in the gym. I found that extremely weird, for example when i would do flat bench, it would hurt its most when i was racking the weight and taking my hand pressure off the bar, thats when it hurt the most, but when i was in the middle of pushing heavy weight i barely felt it, i found that to be extremely odd, and i posted about this many years ago when i had it, and others had said the same thing,

do you experience it hurts more with lighter weight, or just all around pain
 
What happens for me when it's flared up is, it's extremely sore pretty much all the time. Golfer's elbow is on the opposite side as tennis elbow, so wrist and finger flexion is what irritates it and is painful. But then, if I play hockey or train back in spite of the pain, it stops hurting after a little while while I'm playing or working out. Then it comes roaring back, worse than before. And so it goes, getting progressively worse. Eventually it got so bad I couldn't push through the pain and when I tried it wouldn't go away.

when I started the PT exercises I had to back the weight down so low it was ridiculous to be able to do it without too much pain, and slowly increase it. I bought these "plate mates", which are magnetized, 1-1/4 lb weights that stick on the ends of my hex dumbbells so I could increase the weight in small increments in order to keep the pain at bay and still make progress. And doing it every day is key: skip a day or two and I start getting sore again.

But wow, I didn't realize how weak my grip muscles were! First time I played hockey after taking off a couple months and doing these exercises, I couldn't believe how fast and crisp my passes and wrist shot were! The same effort I used before LAUNCHED the puck!! :cool::cool::cool:
 
oh and oddly enough, when it was at its worse, the light weight is what hurt it more so then going heavy in the gym. I found that extremely weird, for example when i would do flat bench, it would hurt its most when i was racking the weight and taking my hand pressure off the bar, thats when it hurt the most, but when i was in the middle of pushing heavy weight i barely felt it, i found that to be extremely odd, and i posted about this many years ago when i had it, and others had said the same thing,

do you experience it hurts more with lighter weight, or just all around pain
has alot to do with inflammation I think. So the constant pressure of the heavy weight probably helps but then the release just sends surges of pain. Yeah I get this. Ive tried icing but seems to not affect it any, but arm wraps actually help a little keeping the pressure on.
 
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has alot to do with inflammation I think. So the constant pressure of the heavy weight probably helps but then the release just sends surges of pain. Yeah I get this. Ive tried icing but seems to not affect it any, but arm wraps actually help a little keeping the pressure on.

yes thats exactly it! well at least i know its not just me, as it always seemed odd and a little backwards
 
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