
Acupuncture for Tennis Elbow
Many of us have experienced a
painful elbow from time to time after a golf game, raking the lawn, or a long
session on the computer. Usually it clears up after a few days’ rest. But for
a lot of people, the pain doesn’t go away, and they eventually have to go in for
treatment. Elbow pain which is due to inflammation of the tendons that attach
the lower arm bones to the upper arm is usually called "tennis elbow." It can
also be called tendonitis of the elbow, or sometimes "golf elbow."
In this country, doctors recommend an approach that starts with basic care
like resting the elbow, avoiding overuse, and wearing a brace. Next, physical
therapy, anti-inflammatory drugs, or pain killers are tried. Finally, steroid
injections (cortisone shots) may be used in an effort to reduce the
inflammation.
In China, acupuncture is the first choice of doctors and their patients in
the treatment of tennis elbow. More radical approaches like surgery or steroid
injections are a last resort. In my practice, I often see people who have
already tried everything that Western medicine has to offer, including steroid
injections, and who still suffer with debilitating pain. One of my patients,
Mike, is a good example of this. He had been a tennis coach for fifteen years,
and loved his job, but for the last year he had been experiencing severe elbow
pain. He tried three steroid injections with no relief. Now he was forced to
consider the possibility of giving up tennis for good. Fortunately, acupuncture
worked very well for Mike. We started with two treatments a week, and after
five weeks, his pain had decreased significantly. Normally, I ask patients to
rest their elbow during treatment, but Mike had to continue giving tennis
lessons and classes during this time. Even so, he improved to the point where
he could continue with the work that he loved.
The effectiveness of acupuncture in treating tennis elbow was the subject
of a study done in Sweden by Dr. Gunilla Brattberg. She found that patients
treated with acupuncture became much better, or even completely free of pain.
None of them got worse or had any side effects from acupuncture treatment. Dr.
Brattberg noted that acupuncture is a more time-consuming treatment modality
than steroid injection, but while there may be dramatic improvement using
steroids, there can also be a worsening of symptoms with steroids. Most
acupuncture practitioners find that patients who have had steroid injections are
slower to respond to acupuncture treatments than patients who have not been
injected.
What kind of treatment can you expect at an acupuncture clinic? Exact
treatment will vary somewhat from person to person, but most people begin with
two acupuncture treatments a week for a few weeks, decreasing the frequency of
treatment as the condition improves. The practitioner may also use electrical
stimulation, heat lamp, and herbal patches to speed up the healing. Because
tennis elbow is the inflammation of a tendon, it usually takes longer to heal
than an inflamed muscle would, but you should notice at least some improvement
after four or five treatments.
One of my patients asked me an interesting question recently. Samantha is
a flight attendant, and has developed severe tennis elbow pain as a result of
her job. She said, "I’m pretty sure my elbow problem is from carrying a coffee
pot around half the day and lifting heavy luggage. But I’ve only been a flight
attendant for five years. Some of my co-workers have been lifting coffee pots
and luggage for twenty years, and they’re fine. Is there something wrong with
me?"
It does seem like some people are more at risk to develop this problem than
others, even if two people are doing the exact same job. Chinese medicine has a
unique explanation for this, based on the idea that most health problems are due
to an internal imbalance of a fundamental substance of the body, like Chi, Yin,
or Yang. In Chinese medicine theory, the Liver controls the tendons. If there
is a deficiency of Liver Yin, tendons will not be moistened and nourished
enough, and the tendons will dry out and become inflamed. When an acupuncture
practitioner treats you, he or she will treat the underlying imbalance as well
as the symptoms of pain that you have. Like Mike, Samantha responded to
acupuncture very well, and has had no recurrent elbow problems since then.
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