Lateral Epicondyle Tendinopathy Toolkit: Section E - Exercise Prescription: Difference between revisions

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{{#ev:youtube|xgTdtBrx2nc|width}}<ref>Tyler Twist. Available from:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xgTdtBrx2nc </ref>
== References  ==
== Resources ==
== Resources ==



Revision as of 15:19, 11 November 2022

Original Editor - Rishika Babburu for BC Physical Therapy Tendinopathy Task Force:

Dr. Joseph Anthony, Paul Blazey, Dr. Allison Ezzat, Dr. Angela Fearon, Diana Hughes, Carol Kennedy, Dr. Alex Scott, Michael Yates and Alison Hoens


Top Contributors - Evan Thomas, Rishika Babburu, Kim Jackson, Admin, Wanda van Niekerk and Vidya Acharya  


This article is currently under review and may not be up to date. Please come back soon to see the finished work! (11/11/2022)

Introduction[edit | edit source]

Exercises for lateral epicondyle tendinopathy (LET) should be chosen according to patient preference, and the clinical evaluation.

There is a large volume of clinical evidence that consistently supports the use of exercise for management of chronic LET. Studies evaluating strength-based exercise have demonstrated improvement in symptoms regardless of the muscle contraction-type (e.g. concentric, eccentric or isometric). Some evidence suggests that eccentric exercises may provide superior pain relief, but providing an exercise that the patient can tolerate (isometric, concentric or eccentric) is the most important consideration.

The summary of interventions suggests (see section D) that clinicians strongly consider using local and upper limb kinetic chain exercises to support patients suffering from chronic LET. The following are examples of exercises to consider based upon the available literature

Concentric/Eccentric Home Exercise Program[1][edit | edit source]

[Needs a a summary description of concentric/eccentric exercises]. The exercises below are based on a study by Peterson et al 2011[2]

Frequency: Daily, for 3-months

Intensity: Resistance will be dictated by patient’s current capacity (e.g. 1 Repetition Maximum - RM)

Time:

  • Aim is to complete 3 sets of 15 reps (approx. 65% of 1RM) once per day.
  • Water can be used as resistance if you do not have weights available. 1 litre of water = approx’ 1kg.
  • An option is to increase resistance by 0.1 kg (100ml water) weekly or as tolerated by the patient.
Fig 1 of LET App C
    Figure 1


Isometric Home Exercise Program[3][edit | edit source]

[Needs a description of eccentric exercises and stretching. The exercises below are based on a study by Stasinopoulos et al 2006[4]

Frequency: Once daily for 8-weeks

Intensity: Start at 20% Maximum Voluntary Contraction (MVC) progressively adding 5% every two weeks

Time: 30 seconds for 4 repetitions per day (30 secs rest between reps)

In the protocol the reps reduced to 3 but the contraction time increased to 45 seconds on alternating weeks. This was to generate a slow progression in the time-under-tension placed upon the lateral epicondyle tendon.

Eccentric-only Home Exercise Program[5][edit | edit source]

Frequency: 3 times per week, for 4-weeks

Intensity: Unclear

Time: 30s lowering phase for each repetition. Repeated for 10 repetitions and 3 sets. Take 1 minute between sets.

Patients were instructed to raise the wrist as high as possible, using the opposite hand to support into the top position before performing a slow lowering (eccentric) contraction.

Note, the prescription outlined would create 300-seconds of time-under-tension per set of exercise.

Patients were also advised that this should elicit some mild pain, and to increase the level of resistance once the pain had gone, therefore maintaining mild pain for the 4-week intervention. They were to cease exercise if the pain became disabling.

Fig 2a of LET App C
    Figure 2A

Fig 2b of LET App C
    Figure 2B


The “Tyler Twist” Eccentric Wrist Extensor Exercise[edit | edit source]

[Needs a description of eccentric wrist externsor exercises]. The exercises below are based on a study (Tyler et al 2010[6])

Frequency: Daily, approximately 6 weeks.

Intensity: Increase resistance by using a thicker bar when the exercise is pain-free.

Time: Each rep should consist of around 4 seconds in the final phase of holding the wrist in a flexed position. This should be repeated for 3 sets of 15 once daily. 30 second rest between sets.

Steps in the Tyler-twist

  • i. Hold the bar in the hand of the affected arm with the unaffected arm above (as shown
  • ii. With the affected wrist in full extension, twist the bar with the unaffected hand.
  • iii. Stretch both arms out so the elbows are fully extended
  • iv. Slowly allow the affected wrist to bend into flexion, allowing for an eccentric load of the wrist extensors

Fig 3a of LET App C
Figure 3A
Fig 3b of LET App C
Figure 3B
Fig 3c of LET App C
Figure 3C
Fig 3d of LET App C
Figure 3D
Fig 3e of LET App C
Figure 3E




[7]

References[edit | edit source]

Resources[edit | edit source]

References[edit | edit source]

  1. Peterson M, Butler S, Eriksson M, Svardsudd K. A randomized controlled trial of exercise versus wait-list in chronic tennis elbow (lateral epicondylosis). Uppsala Journal of Medical Science. 2011; 116: 269-279
  2. Peterson M, Butler S, Eriksson M, Svardsudd K. A randomized controlled trial of exercise versus wait-list in chronic tennis elbow (lateral epicondylosis). Uppsala Journal of Medical Science. 2011; 116: 269-279.
  3. Vuvan V, Vicenzino B, Mellor R, Heales LJ, Coombes BK. Unsupervised Isometric Exercise versus Wait-and-See for Lateral Elbow Tendinopathy. Medicine and science in sports and exercise. 2020 Feb 1;52(2):287-95.
  4. Stasinopoulos D, Stasinopoulos I. (2006) Comparison of effects of cyriax physiotherapy, a supervised exercise programme and polarized polychromatic non-coherent light (bioptron light) for the treatment of lateral epicondylosis. Clinical Rehabilitation. 2006; 20(1): 12-23.
  5. Stasinopoulos D, Stasinopoulos I. (2006) Comparison of effects of cyriax physiotherapy, a supervised exercise programme and polarized polychromatic non-coherent light (bioptron light) for the treatment of lateral epicondylosis. Clinical Rehabilitation. 2006; 20(1): 12-23.
  6. Tyler T, Thomas G, Nicholas S, McHugh M. Addition of isolated wrist extensor eccentric exercise to standard treatment for chronic lateral epicondylosis: a prospective randomized trial. Journal Of Shoulder And Elbow Surgery. Sep 2010; 19(6): 917-922.
  7. Tyler Twist. Available from:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xgTdtBrx2nc