The anterior-medial forearm contains several muscles that flex the wrist and pronate the forearm.[1] These muscles have a common tendinous attachment at the medial epicondyle of the humerus at the elbow joint.[1]
The injury is not acute inflammation, but rather is a chronic disorder resulting from overuse of a repetitive arm motion.[1][2] Repetitive activity leads to recurrent microtears within the flexor tendon, with remodeling of the collagen fibers and an increase in the amount of mucoidground substance.[1] As a result, scar tissue formation and thickening of the tendon lead to reduced collagen strength and pain with repetitive use.[1]
The condition is referred to as golfer's elbow when a full golf swing causes elbow pain. It may also be called pitcher's elbow due to the same tendon being stressed by repetitive throwing of objects, such as a baseball or football.[1][3][4]
Golfer's elbow appears to occur from repetitive full swings during the period from the top of the backswing to just before ball impact.[1] The full swing motion causes high energy valgus forces during the late cocking (backswing in golf) and acceleration phase (downswing and impact).[1]
It is unknown whether this condition is any more common in labor-related occupations with forceful repetitive activities (such as in construction or plumbing) than it is in the general public.[1]
In adults, the pathophysiology may involve mucoid degeneration (disorganized collagen, increased extra-cellular matrix, and chondroid metaplasia).[5]
Diagnosis
Medial epicondylitis is diagnosed based on characteristic pain with activities using strength in wrist flexion and confirmed on examination with discrete point tenderness over the common flexor origin at the medial epicondyle, and pain with resisted wrist flexion and passive wrist extension.[1][2][4][6]
Imaging may be employed, although radiography might show calcifications in the muscle origin. Ultrasound and magnetic resonance imaging can identify the mucoid degeneration, but are not necessary for diagnosis.[1][2][4]
Occurrence
Medial injury of the flexor tendon is estimated to occur in 0.4% of the population.[1] It occurs most often in people ages 45 to 64, is more common in women than in men, and with 75% of cases in the dominant arm.[1]
Risk factors for developing golfer's elbow include improper technique or lack of strength, endurance, or flexibility.[1] Risk factors in people performing manual labor include heavy and excessive repetition, high body mass index, the presence of comorbidities, and high work demands.[1]
A counterforce brace or "elbow strap" to reduce strain at the elbow epicondyle, to limit pain provocation and to protect against further damage.
Before anesthetics and steroids are used, conservative treatment with an occupational therapist may be attempted. Before therapy can commence, treatment such as rest, ice, compression and elevation (R.I.C.E.) will typically be used.[1][2][4] This will help to decrease the pain and inflammation; rest will alleviate discomfort because golfer's elbow is an overuse injury. The subject can use a tennis elbow splint for compression. A pad can be placed anteromedially on the proximal forearm.[7] The splint is made in 30–45 degrees of elbow flexion. A daytime elbow pad also may be useful, by limiting additional trauma to the nerve.[8]
Simple analgesic medication has a place, as does more specific treatment with oral anti-inflammatory medications.[1][2][4] These will help control pain and any inflammation.[7] A more invasive treatment is the injection into and around the inflamed and tender area of a glucocorticoid (steroid) agent.[9]
Physical therapy
Therapy includes a variety of exercises for muscle and tendon reconditioning, starting with stretching and gradual strengthening of the flexor-pronator muscles.[2][4][6] Strengthening will slowly begin with isometrics and progresses to eccentric exercises helping to extend the range of motion back to where it once was. After the strengthening exercises, it is common for the subject to ice the area.[7]
Surgery
After 6 months if the symptoms do not improve, surgery may be recommended.[1][2][4] Surgical debridement or cleaning of the area is one of the most common treatments.[6] The ulnar nerve may also be decompressed surgically.[7] If the appropriate remediation steps are taken – rest, ice, and rehabilitative exercise and stretching – recovery may follow. Few subjects will need to progress to steroid injection, and less than 10% will require surgical intervention.[7]Arthroscopy is not an option for treating golfer's elbow.[6]
^Jacobs, J.W.G.; Michels-van Amelsfort, J.M.R. (April 2013). "How to perform local soft-tissue glucocorticoid injections?". Best Practice & Research Clinical Rheumatology. 27 (2): 171–194. doi:10.1016/j.berh.2013.03.003. PMID23731930.