I think I'm just in the early stages. Dumbbell curls are the cause, which I have already stopped doing. Any experience with successful treatment?
So, one avoids the offending exercise until the tendon heals. Then, one returns to the same exercises only to have the same problem recur later? How the hell do guys weight train for years, especially when they get older?If anything not only do the tendons/joints/connective tissue take a beating from lifting heavy weights (low rep training) but even when one uses lighter weights with higher reps excessively there is still wear/tear from the repetitive motions.
Rest and avoiding the specific exercises which cause aggravation are critical to ones recovery!
One will find that if you have been weight training long enough theses issues will tend to creep up now and than only to become more common as one ages!
So, one avoids the offending exercise until the tendon heals. Then, one returns to the same exercises only to have the same problem recur later? How the hell do guys weight train for years, especially when they get older?
I think I'm just in the early stages. Dumbbell curls are the cause, which I have already stopped doing. Any experience with successful treatment?
Last summer when I hurt my elbow by going to the driving range every day. I had to stop doing pull-ups for 6 months but whoever reason I was able to work hard on chin-ups. After about 6 months my elbow did heal and I was able to resume both chin-ups and pull ups.I've been dealing with this lately (golfers elbow - pain on inside of elbow). I went to a chiro that is certified in Active Release and that did seem to help. But regardless of treatment, if you keep hammering it, it will continue to hurt.
Things that piss my elbows off: Chin ups are the worst. Pull ups cause less pain. Neutral grip palms facing each other causes the least pain. Biceps curls can hurt. What Nashtide said above is true - be sure you're not curling your wrists up when doing curling movements.
Wrist wraps for heavy shrugs etc will take a lot of the load off of your wrists, elbows.
Something I plan to change up soon as an experiment is to mix my splits. For example, a lot of people have a "pull" day when they do biceps/back, and a "push" day when they do triceps/chest. A friend suggested mixing them - doing biceps/chest together and triceps/back together. The theory being that you can better max out the individual muscles you're targeting because they're not already tired from previous movements. Also, doing all of your heavy pulling on back/biceps day exacerbates elbow issues...maybe splitting the pulling movements into different days would help that too.