Golfers Elbow_ Why “Slowing Down” Your Muscles Can Speed Up Recovery
If you’ve ever felt pain on the inside of your elbow when gripping, lifting, or swinging a golf club — you might be dealing with medial epicondylitis, also known as golfer’s elbow.
This condition doesn’t just affect golfers. It’s common in:
- Gym-goers
- Trades workers
- Athletes
- Anyone doing repetitive gripping or lifting
The good news? Research shows that a specific type of exercise may help improve both
pain and function.
What Did the Study Find?
A recent systematic review looked at multiple studies on a treatment called eccentric exercise for medial epicondylitis.
Eccentric exercise means:
👉 Controlling the lowering phase of a movement (like slowly lowering a weight instead of lifting it)
Here’s what the research found:
- Eccentric exercises helped reduce pain
- They improved strength and function
- Results were even better when combined with other treatments
- Some patients had long-term improvement, even years later
👉 Simple takeaway:
Slow, controlled strengthening can help your tendon heal and get stronger
Why Does This Work?
Golfer’s elbow is a tendon problem, not just muscle soreness.
It happens when:
- The forearm muscles are overused
- Small tears build up over time
- The tendon becomes irritated and weak
Eccentric exercise helps by:
- Improving tendon strength and structure
- Increasing collagen production (helps healing)
- Reducing pain signals in the tissue
- Improving load tolerance (so your body can handle activity again)
Why Rest Alone Isn’t Enough
Many people try:
- Rest
- Ice
- Braces
While these can help short-term, they don’t fix the root problem.
👉 Without proper loading, the tendon stays weak
👉 And pain often comes back when activity resumes
That’s why movement-based rehab is key.
How This Affects Your Daily Life
Golfer’s elbow can impact:
- Lifting objects
- Carrying groceries
- Opening jars
- Working out
- Sports performance
If left untreated, it can become chronic and frustrating
How Our Team Helps You Recover
At our clinic, we take a full-body, movement-based approach — not just treating the elbow.
Occupational Therapy (OT)
We help you:
- Retrain how you grip, lift, and move during daily activities
- Build functional strength that carries into real life
- Modify tasks to reduce strain while still staying active
- Progress exercises safely back to work, gym, or sport
Chiropractic Care
- Improves joint mobility in the elbow, wrist, and spine
- Reduces mechanical stress on the tendon
- Helps restore proper movement patterns
Acupuncture
- Helps reduce pain and inflammation
- Promotes circulation to support healing
- Calms the nervous system
Medical Providers
- Assist with pain management when needed
- Guide safe recovery timelines
Why a Combined Approach Works Best
This study showed something important:
👉 Eccentric exercise works even better when combined with other treatments
That’s exactly how we treat patients.
By combining:
- Strengthening
- Manual therapy
- Movement retraining
- Pain management
We can improve:
- Pain
- Biomechanics (how your body moves)
- Performance in work, sport, and daily life
Simple Takeaway
If you’re dealing with golfer’s elbow:
✔ Don’t rely on rest alone
✔ Don’t ignore the pain
👉 Start a structured strengthening program
👉 Focus on slow, controlled movements
👉 Get guidance from a team that treats the whole body
Ready to Get Back to What You Love?
If elbow pain is limiting your:
- Work
- Workouts
- Sports
- Daily activities
We’re here to help you recover the right way — and stay pain-free long term.
Study Link
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ctim.2026.103364
Reference
See, Z. H., Loo, C. E., & Jaafar, Z. (2026).
Eccentric exercise therapy for medial epicondylitis: A systematic review of clinical outcomes.
Complementary Therapies in Medicine.












