Golfer’s Elbow Physical Therapy That Fixes the Root Cause
Golfer’s elbow can make gripping, lifting, swinging, and even everyday tasks uncomfortable. Despite the name, it affects far more than golfers. It shows up in anyone using their forearm repeatedly, from workouts to racquet sports to daily activity.
The biggest frustration is that rest only works temporarily. Once activity resumes, the pain often comes right back.
At The Performance Lab, we focus on why the elbow keeps getting overloaded so you can break that cycle.
Common Back Problems We Help With
- Inner elbow pain
- Pain gripping or lifting
- Pain during golf, racquet sports, or workouts
- Forearm tightness and irritation
- Recurring elbow pain with activity
- Pain with pulling, carrying, or pressing
- Overuse-related elbow injuries
Why it Keeps Coming Back
Golfer’s elbow is often treated as a local issue, but the real problem is usually bigger.
Poor shoulder mechanics, weak upper-body support, repetitive strain, and improper load management all contribute. If the elbow is constantly overloaded, symptoms return as soon as activity picks up again.
How The Performance Lab Solves It
We look beyond the elbow to fix the entire system.
Your plan may include:
- reducing irritation and improving tissue mobility
- strengthening the forearm and grip
- improving shoulder and upper-body mechanics
- building load tolerance gradually
- correcting movement patterns
- returning to activity without re-aggravation
Who This Is For
- Active adults with persistent inner elbow pain
- Athletes dealing with overuse injuries
- Lifters with elbow pain during training
- Anyone frustrated by recurring flare-ups
FAQs
What causes golfer’s elbow?
Usually repetitive strain combined with poor mechanics and load management.
Can PT fix golfer’s elbow?
Yes, especially when addressing strength and movement patterns.
Do I need to stop activity?
Not always. Many benefit from modified loading.
Why does it keep coming back?
Because the underlying cause has not been addressed.
How long does recovery take?
It varies, but consistent rehab speeds the process.