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Tennis Elbow: Should I Have Surgery?

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Tennis Elbow: Should I Have Surgery?

You may want to have a say in this decision, or you may simply want to follow your doctor's recommendation. Either way, this information will help you understand what your choices are so that you can talk to your doctor about them.

Tennis Elbow: Should I Have Surgery?

Here's a record of your answers. You can use it to talk with your doctor or loved ones about your decision.

Get the facts

Your options

  • Have surgery to treat tennis elbow.
  • Try tendon rest and rehabilitation or other treatment.

Key points to remember

  • Surgery to treat tennis elbow is usually done only when rest and rehabilitation don't work. If you still have elbow pain and stiffness after more than 6 to 12 months of rest and rehab, you might think about having surgery.
  • Resting the tendon, Opens dialog is important. With rest, rehabilitation, and sometimes corticosteroid, Opens dialog shots, tennis elbow usually heals in 6 to 12 months.
  • Tennis elbow gets worse when you keep doing the activities that caused it. To keep pain from coming back after surgery or other treatment, you'll need to avoid the activity that caused tennis elbow or change the way you do it.
  • There is more than one surgery for treating tennis elbow, but there is no proof that one works better than another.footnote 1
  • Surgery may not cure tennis elbow.

FAQs

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Current as of: July 31, 2024

Author: Ignite Healthwise, LLC Staff

Clinical Review Board
All Healthwise education is reviewed by a team that includes physicians, nurses, advanced practitioners, registered dieticians, and other healthcare professionals.

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