Lateral Epicondylitis (Tennis Elbow)
Pain at the lateral epicondyle from overuse of wrist extensors, particularly ECRB. Assessment covers wrist extensor loading tolerance, grip strength, radial head mobility, and cervical screening for referred pain.
Key ROM Tests
Risk Factors Assessed
Expected Timeline
6-12 weeks for mild, 12-24 weeks for chronic tendinopathy, Tyler twist protocol 12+ weeks
Frequently Asked Questions
Can lateral epicondylitis (tennis elbow) be corrected with exercise?
What assessments are done for lateral epicondylitis (tennis elbow)?
Is lateral epicondylitis (tennis elbow) the same for everyone?
How do I get started with the Lateral Epicondylitis (Tennis Elbow) protocol?
Get your Lateral Epicondylitis (Tennis Elbow) assessment
Your coach runs this protocol as part of your structural evaluation, then builds a personalized corrective plan based on the data.
Apply for AssessmentProtocol Details
- Category
- Condition
- Subcategory
- Pain Condition
- ROM Tests
- 6
- Corrective Targets
- 4
- Benchmarked
- Yes
- Red Flag Screens
- 4
- Timeline
- 6-12 weeks for mild, 12-24 weeks for chronic tendinopathy, Tyler twist protocol 12+ weeks
Take our 2-minute quiz to identify your pain patterns and get a personalized correction plan.
Related Condition Protocols
Progressive loss of shoulder ROM with pain, following a freezing-frozen-thawing pattern. Assessment targets active and passive ROM loss, capsular pattern identification, and functional limitation severity.
Sleeping Position PainPain that worsens with sleeping position or is worst upon waking. Assessment targets the biomechanical positions maintained during sleep, pillow and mattress suitability, and the musculoskeletal conditions exacerbated by prolonged static postures.
Forward Head PostureAnterior translation of the head relative to the thorax, increasing cervical lordosis at the upper segments and creating chin-poke posture. Driven by deep neck flexor weakness, upper trapezius dominance, thoracic kyphosis, and sustained screen/device use.
External Rotation Gait (Duck Feet)Externally rotated foot position during gait, driven by tibial torsion, hip external rotation dominance, ankle eversion, and foot pronation patterns. Can be structural (tibial/femoral torsion) or functional (muscle imbalance).
Hallux Valgus (Bunions)Lateral deviation of the great toe with medial prominence at the first MTP joint. Assessment targets first MTP mobility, great toe extension, medial arch support, footwear assessment, and gait toe-off pattern.
Text Neck / Phone PostureCervical flexion posture from sustained phone and device use, accelerating disc degeneration, headache, and upper trap tension. Assessment targets cervical lordosis, deep neck flexor function, thoracic extension, and screen-time habits.