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#1 |
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Rookie
Join Date: Aug 2006
Posts: 311
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Just recently I have started feeling a bit of elbow tenderness after playing tennis. A friend of mine who used to suffer from tennis elbow swears by this brace. He claims that it has completely cured his elbow pain. Does anybody else have any experience with this product?
Thanks. http://www.orthobrace.com/fla/products/19-600.htm |
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#2 |
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Rookie
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You cant completely cure TE. The elbow brace might/should help, but it wont make your TE dissapear completly.
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(2x) n6.1 95 16x18 - MSV Hex @ 57# |
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| AznRamenDude |
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#3 |
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Hall Of Fame
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i would say use a softer string like head synthetic gut
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Member of the "Hope Federer will keep Winning Everything for 2013 Club" |
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| Leelord337 |
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#4 |
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Legend
Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: Stuck in the Matrix somewhere in Santa Clara CA
Posts: 7,782
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Products like this one can ease the pain of TE by changing the geometry of the forearm muscles to minimize stress on the extensor tendons. It can also be a great feedback tool. If the support/clasp is somewhat snug (as it probably should be), you should feel more forearm pressure underneath the device if you are gripping excessively (gripping too often or too tightly) -- this can be an excellent reminder to keep your grip fairly loose most of the time.
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| SystemicAnomaly |
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#5 |
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Rookie
Join Date: Aug 2007
Posts: 121
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I've recently started playing again after 2 months off (due to tendonitis in my arm).
I bought one of those braces because I could barely hold my racket and I needed something to help me get through a USTA match I had (I didn't want to forfeit). Looking back, I should've saved the 20 bucks and just rested. It did help with the pain during my match but I knew in the back of my mind that I was still doing damage to my tendons by playing through the pain. The problem with that brace is that it gives you the impression that you are "cured" when in fact it is just masking the pain which is your body's way of saying something is wrong. Since then I've switched to softer strings (VS gut and Maxim Touch) strung at a lower tension as well as not using a death grip when I play. I feel a lot better now. Most people use that brace because they want a "quick fix" (as I did) for their tennis elbow pain. They love playing and they don't want to take the time off to properly rest and fix the problem correctly. Take it from me, just rest up, ice, take some NSAIDs, and when you return, check to make sure your technique is correct. You don't want to rely on wearing stuff on your arm just so you can keep playing the sport you love most. |
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#6 | |
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Banned
Join Date: Apr 2008
Location: Sunny SoCal
Posts: 3,086
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Quote:
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#7 |
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Semi-Pro
Join Date: Apr 2008
Posts: 520
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I was out for 4 months with tennis elbow and this physical therapy fixed me right up. I swear by it.
http://www.astym.com/ |
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