T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1239.1 | SOunds like a "scuse" | NEWPRT::JOHNSON_DO | | Fri May 10 1991 13:34 | 9 |
| Best to go see a sports doctor. Sometimes a treatment of aspirin,
light excercise progressing to weight training can reduce the
inflammation and put you back on course. The problem with just rest is
that this does nothing to protect you from getting it again.
Good luck - if you find a cure, I am willing to become your marketing
VP and we can retire to our own golf course.
SoCalDandy
|
1239.2 | Just my opinion.. | PARITY::DDAVIS | Long-cool woman in a black dress | Fri May 10 1991 14:45 | 3 |
| You might want to see a chiropractor.
-Dotti.
|
1239.3 | Quinine may help | HAMPS::HARRIS_S | | Mon May 13 1991 05:34 | 16 |
| I have had tendonitis around my achillis tendons for 2/3 years now. I
tried physio for 6-9 months, and my physio couldn't understand why it
wouldn't go away.
I've decided to live with it now, but find that if I really stretch the
offending muscles before, but more importantly after playing sport,
this seems to get rid of the acid that causes the stiffness.
One suggestion my physio had, though, was to drink tonic water before
playing, as this contains quinine which is supposed to help relax the
muscles. Might be worth a try.
Good luck.
Sheila
|
1239.4 | Ibuprofen works great! | NETCUR::TUFTS | | Mon May 13 1991 13:55 | 13 |
| Take 2 Ibuprofen 4 times a day for 2-3 days (Advil, Nuprin, Motrin-B,
or any of the generic Ibuprofen. I used to get tendonitis frequently
and the doctor won't even discuss it until I have done my share of the
treatment and it works great----now I take 2 right after I do any
strenuous repetitive exercise, tennis, chopping wood, painting,
sanding and I never have much trouble. Try it, its cheaper than a
chiropractor and often what the doctor first prescribes before
cortisone for extreme tendonitis.
Discontinue the motion that caused it for a few days until the
treatment has had time to reduce the inflammation.
Sharon
|
1239.5 | Just say no... | PARITY::DDAVIS | Long-cool woman in a black dress | Mon May 13 1991 14:28 | 2 |
| Forget all the "drugs" and see a chiropractor. It will be worth it in
the long run.
|
1239.6 | cheap fix | GRANPA::RFAGLEY | loose cannon | Mon May 13 1991 15:27 | 4 |
| I've had tendonitis in both elbows all season. It finally is
subsiding. All I did was stretch daily, (hang from a door frame!).
Rick
|
1239.7 | Dr. Jim says, | DNEAST::STEVENS_JIM | | Tue May 14 1991 12:26 | 32 |
| I have tendonitis in my right elbow. They call it Tennis Elbow,
although I've never played tennis in my life.
The cause is a repetetive motion, such as a golf swing.
I saw an orthopedic surgeon last fall. He is also a Sports Medicine
Doctor. Here is his remedy, which by the way worked.
1) Get a 5-10 lb weight. Hold it in your hand, arm out straight,
palm of the hand down. Using just your forearm muscles, let the
weight pull (stretch) the forearm muscle. Then lift the wieght
using just the forearm muscle. The key is to strengthen the
muscle on the other side of the forearm to relieve the pressure
over the elbow.
To begin, do 3 sets of 10 reps. Building to 3 sets of 20-25 reps
each day.
2) Use one of those forarm wraps. The one a lot of golfers and
tennis players use.
3) Take 2 Bufferin if it hurts.
I've done 1 and 3, have yet to do two yet. Sometimes my elbow hurts
after 18 holes. When it does, I do the buffering trick and start with
the weight again. That seems to help.
Remember, the key is to strengthen the muscle opposite the muscle over
the elbow.
Jim
|
1239.8 | | ASABET::VARLEY | | Tue May 14 1991 15:05 | 11 |
| The exercise Jim mentioned works. It did for me. Here's some other
things that helped me.
1. Take 2 aspirin 1/2 hr before playing.
2. Put some wet heat on the area 1/2 hr before playing.
3. Take 2 aspirin right after playing.
4. Ice the area down right after playing.
The aspirin/wet heat will loosen the area up. The aspirin/ice will
keep the inflammation and pain down.
--Jack
|
1239.9 | Find someone who knows what they are talking about | CHRLIE::HUSTON | | Tue May 14 1991 16:26 | 18 |
|
It has been my experience that taking aspirin/ice/heat is nothing
more than a patch and in the long run is probably bad for the
real problem. Something probably caused the tendonitis in the
first place, this is what you need to cure. If it was just
a bad swing or a funny twist then rest it.
I would recommend seeing a sports medicine person and/or an
orthopedic surgeon. It may be as simple as a cortison shot
and some rest, or simply some rest and simple strengthening
exercise to strengthen the weak area.
See someone who knows what they are talking about, all cases are
different, what is right for one person is not right for another.
--Bob
|
1239.10 | | KOALA::DIAMOND | No brag, Just fact. | Wed May 15 1991 14:45 | 27 |
| >> It has been my experience that taking aspirin/ice/heat is nothing
>> more than a patch and in the long run is probably bad for the
>> real problem. Something probably caused the tendonitis in the
>> first place, this is what you need to cure. If it was just
>> a bad swing or a funny twist then rest it.
I've had tenonitis in my elbow (actually both) and it had nothing to do
with golf. The one I had last year was caused when I built a 110'
retaining wall. Stretching and light exercise is the BEST way to get
rid of it. Resting the elbow is not going to work. The muscle needs to
be stretched. If you just rest it, it'll take much longer to heal
(about 5 - 6 months) if it heals at all. The treatment I had was with a
ultrasonic machine. It would heat the muscle from within. Then I did 10
- 15 minutes of stretching and exercise, followed by icing.
>> I would recommend seeing a sports medicine person and/or an
>> orthopedic surgeon. It may be as simple as a cortison shot
>> and some rest, or simply some rest and simple strengthening
>> exercise to strengthen the weak area.
As little as a cortison shot????? This isn't little at all!! In fact
this is very drastic measures. This is probably the last treatment you
want.
Mike
|
1239.11 | Double barrel | USEM::VOUTSELAS | | Wed May 15 1991 16:23 | 22 |
| Jim hit it on the nose !!
I am the all time expert on this subject !!
Two worn rotator cups and tendonitis in the left bicep.
Saw head of orthodedics for Harvard U.
Had two cortisone shots in each shoulder, right one 4 years ago
and left one 2 years ago. DO not recomend more than this as
cortisone and cortisone substitutes are actually steroids.
The right one took one month to take , the left one year.
Cortisone are the last resort, and they will weaken bone
if over done.
The exercise described by Jim is very good.
I use a liquid gallon of laundry detergent and due circular
arm motion with left arm and can actually feel the muscles pulling
down. And it strengthens the muscles around the shoulder .
Next would be arthriscopic surgery.
And that's my excuse for not being scratch!
Ang
|
1239.12 | Simple cures not always right | CHRLIE::HUSTON | | Thu May 16 1991 14:01 | 30 |
|
re .10
>retaining wall. Stretching and light exercise is the BEST way to get
>rid of it. Resting the elbow is not going to work. The muscle needs to
>be stretched. If you just rest it, it'll take much longer to heal
>(about 5 - 6 months) if it heals at all. The treatment I had was with a
>ultrasonic machine. It would heat the muscle from within. Then I did 10
>- 15 minutes of stretching and exercise, followed by icing.
THe face that you had ultra-sounds is an indication that you went to
a Dr and that is what he prescribed. Fine, my point was that you should
see a Dr to see what the problem is. Many times stretching would
do the trick and you'll be all set.
In my case, I had tendonitis in my shoulder, rest, stretching,
ultra-sounds etc were all tried. None worked, note this was over
a period of about 7 months. The problem was being caused by
somehting in my shoulder, no amount of rest etc was going to work.
It took 3 cortisone shots to cure it, this along with other
thereapy and now it is fine.
My point is simply that you should not play Dr with your own body.
If it is hurting something may be wrong. THe cure may be as simple
as rest/stretching, or it could be very complicated adn require
surgery, or anyplace in between. You should play it safe and see
someone who can tell what is causing the problem
--Bob
|
1239.13 | | KOALA::DIAMOND | No brag, Just fact. | Thu May 16 1991 14:56 | 18 |
|
>> In my case, I had tendonitis in my shoulder, rest, stretching,
>> ultra-sounds etc were all tried. None worked, note this was over
>> a period of about 7 months. The problem was being caused by
>> somehting in my shoulder, no amount of rest etc was going to work.
>> It took 3 cortisone shots to cure it, this along with other
>> thereapy and now it is fine.
I agree. And as I said in .10 the cortisone should be used as a LAST
resort. Cortisone must be administered by a Dr. The therapy should be
done first. Then possibly the cortisone or surgery. When I had my
ultrasonic therapy, it was for the first time I got tennis elbow. The
second time I got it, I just followed what the therapist did (with the
exception of the ultrasonic), and it healed in about 2 months.
Mike
|
1239.14 | To be free from pain !! | RAYBOK::COOPER | One-ton Tomato ! | Fri May 17 1991 13:09 | 14 |
| I have had tendonitus in my right elbow for 22 years, it was
brought on by a motorcycle accident and has never healed. I have
given up racquetball, tennis, softball, swimming, and a few other
sports. Golf I refuse to give up though. I have tried excercise,
been to a physical therapist, chiropractor, GP, etc with no cure.
Ice after a round really helps as then it only hurts for a day or
two. I also switched from a 16 pound to 10 pound bowling ball in
my other sport. I envy those of you who have found a cure from this
nagging pain. I have never tried cortisone due to its side- effects
and surgery never seemed viable as nothing was ever revealed in any
tests or x-rays that might be causing it. Maybe I could switch to
playing left handed !!!
Mad Hacker aka Ice-bag Charlie
|
1239.15 | How many dimples in a 10lb ball? | NEWPRT::JOHNSON_DO | | Fri May 17 1991 14:16 | 24 |
| Re: Ice Bag Charlie
No wonder you have such a problem. Bet you could fix your handicap and
your tendonitis fi you would switch from your ten pound bal to a
regulation Titelist or like brand. Must be hell on your graphite woods
to get the ten pounder in the air.
I suspect that most tendonitis is caused by the weekend athelete not
stretching and preparing to participate in the chosen sport. Over a
lonf period of time the condition can become chronic. Those folks have
a different perspective/threshhold on pain. The rest of us can use the
aspirin/strecthing techniques to alleviate/eliminate the problem.
Something else to consider...maybe the swing is causing the problem.
Or the grip..A strong grip can promote the jarring action associated
with tendonitis.
I would think that a strong grip would be required with a ten pound
ball. How long did you play with a 16 pounder? Did you use a shovel
to fix your ball marks? That alone could have aggrivated your
tendonitis.
SoCalDandy
|
1239.16 | a horrible fate | MKNME::DANIELE | | Fri May 17 1991 15:30 | 5 |
| > Maybe I could switch to playing left handed !!!
Trust me, this is much more painful than anything you're enduring now.
Mike
|
1239.17 | Just hard to tee up !! | RAYBOK::COOPER | One-ton Tomato ! | Fri May 17 1991 17:27 | 9 |
| I had to switch to the ten pounder because the 16 would just push the
tee all the way into the ground !! Of course as Jack will attest,
with the Yonex driver you can get any ball into the air and way
down the fairway!
The tip about the strong grip is valid though. Since going to
a more neutral grip, the pain is less after a round. Unless of course
I bury the clubhead into the ground on a full swing !!!
Mad Hacker
|
1239.18 | <Quiet observer> | CECV01::BOZEK | | Mon May 20 1991 11:31 | 7 |
| If you have to take a drop with that 10-pounder be sure your feet are
out of the way or you'll have more than tendonitis to worry about!!!
(Enjoying the repartee!)
Nadine [practicing for the Ladies Senior Tour]
|
1239.19 | MASSAGE THE TENDONS | AIMHI::CROCKETT | | Mon May 20 1991 13:41 | 6 |
| Well, thanks for all the advice. After my physcian told me to wear a
splint for 5 days and take anti-inflammatory drugs , the pain did start
to away. I could not close my index and middle fingers in my left hand.
My elbow was NOT the major source of pain but I did have pain shooting
up my arm every so often. So I went to an orthopedic surgeon. He said
to do hand exercises to strengthen and loosen the tendons.
|
1239.20 | Go for it!! | DEMING::COULOMBE | | Mon Jun 03 1991 09:15 | 8 |
| Marty, cortizone usually work for me. The needle is
long and it hurts, but only for a few seconds and
the tendonitis is gone.
Go for it...........
Betty
|
1239.21 | | NEWPRT::JOHNSON_DO | | Mon Jun 03 1991 15:27 | 5 |
| re:20
Cortisone will make you switch to 16 pound balls.
SCD
|