Historical Overview
- Medial epicondylitis is also described as “golfer’s elbow.”
Description
- Patients
usually experience medial epicondyle tenderness and/or pain anterior and distal to the anterior midpoint of the medial epicondyle of
the pronator teres (PT) and flexor carpi radialis (FCR).1
- With medial epicondylitis, resisted pronation of the forearm with the
wrist in flexion often causes pain.
Pathophysiology
- During activities of wrist flexion and forearm pronation,
flexor-pronator degeneration occurs with forced wrist extension and forearm
supination.2
- Medial epicondylitis is the result of an angiofibroblastic response, not
of an inflammatory process. This response may result from microtrauma of the
FCR and the PT tendons, with an incomplete reparative response. 1
- In rare cases, medial epicondyle tenderness may be caused by a medial
ulnar collateral ligament injury. When this ligament is disturbed, unusual
stress is placed on the articular surfaces, which may change osteophyte
formation.3
Instructions
1. Record the patient’s
history, including any sports-related injuries.
2. Ask the patient to rate
his/her pain on a scale from 1-10, s/he usually experiences in the affected
elbow.
3. While the patient is
bending the wrist in palmar flexion, use one hand to palpate the medial
epicondyle, approximately 5-10 mm anterior and distal to the anterior midpoint
of the medial epicondyle of the PT and FCR.1
4. Ask the patient to make a
fist against the resistance of your other hand.
5. Check whether this
resistance intensifies the tenderness and/or pain.
6. Examine the medial
epicondyle on the contralateral side, with resisted wrist flexion, for
comparison.
Related Signs and Tests
- Medial epicondyle tenderness
- Lateral epicondyle tenderness
- Ulnar neurovascular exam
- Radiographs
- Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and ultrasound
Diagnostic Performance
Characteristics
- To improve reliability, palpate the medial epicondyle from various
directions.
- Do not use other patients’ reactions as a comparison, because other
patients may have different perceptions of similar tenderness and/or pain.