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tennis-elbow Clinical Trials

A listing of tennis-elbow medical research trials actively recruiting patient volunteers. Search for closest city to find more detailed information on a research study in your area.

Found 30 clinical trials

Results of Cervical Segmental Mobilization in Patients With Chronic Lateral Epicondylitis

The aim of our study was to investigate the effect of cervical segmental mobilization on pain, functionality, grip strength and quality of life in patients with chronic lateral epicondylitis. It was planned as a randomized controlled experimental study.

25 - 44 years of age All Phase N/A
J Jung-Taek Hwang, MD, PhD

Vitamin D3 Combined With Strengthening Exercise for Lateral Epicondylitis of Elbow

The goal of this study is to verify the effect of vitamin D3 combined with extensor muscle strengthening exercise in lateral epicondylitis of elbow Are there significant differences in the improvement of functional scores between the study and control groups? Are there significant differences in the improvement of sonographic findings …

20 years of age All Phase N/A
J Johnny Kasto, MD

Efficacy Bioinductive Implant for Tennis Elbow (Lateral Epicondylitis)

The investigators are testing the efficacy of a new, FDA-approved bioinductive patch in lateral epicondylitis (tennis elbow) patients. A bioinductive patch is an implant that may foster tendon regrowth and healing following surgery. Patients will be randomize into one of two groups: control and investigational. Patients in the "control group" …

18 years of age Male Phase 4
E Enrico Guerra, MD

Leukocyte-rich PRP or Leukocyte-free PRP vs Placebo in the Treatment of Epicondylitis

The EPIC-PRP study is a double-blind randomized controlled clinical trial with 1:1:1 allocation.The objective of the study is to evaluate by means of a randomized controlled, double-blind clinical trial the clinical outcomes of echo-guided injection of PRP with or without leukocytes compared with echo-guided injection of saline for minimally invasive …

18 - 65 years of age All Phase N/A
V Vicki Jones, MEd, CCRP

Blood Flow Restriction & Tennis Elbow Rehab

Lateral epicondylitis (LE), often referred to as "tennis elbow" is a common and debilitating overuse injury affecting 1-3% of adults annually. LE is most often defined as a syndrome of pain near the area of the lateral epicondyle of the elbow commonly effecting the origin of the extensor carpi radialis …

18 - 65 years of age All Phase N/A
P Pelin Tiryaki

Upper Extremity-based Exercises and Elbow-focused Exercises in LET

The aim of the study is to investigate the effects of rotator cuff and scapular muscle strengthening exercises applied in addition to the 8-week elbow focused rehabilitation program in lateral elbow tendinopathy, by comparing it with the elbow focused rehabilitation program.

18 - 65 years of age All Phase N/A
J Jian Ding, Dr.

Safety and Preliminary Efficacy of iEVs Injection in Treating Lateral Epicondylitis of Humerus

Evaluate the safety and preliminary efficacy of human induced pluripotent stem cell-derived extracellular vesicle (iEV) injection in the treatment of lateral epicondylitis of the humerus.

18 years of age All Phase 1/2
R Ruqia Begum, MS-OMPT

Effects of Neuromuscular Reeducation Versus Friction Massage in Lateral Epicondylitis

This study is a randomised control trial and the purpose of this study is to determine the effects of neuromuscular reeducation versus friction massage in lateral epicondylitis.

25 - 50 years of age All Phase N/A
A Ahmed E [Elmelhat]

Role of Cervical Spine Mobilization on Lateral Epicondylitis

The study's primary goal is to examine the effectiveness of Mulligan's technique in reducing hyperalgesia in lateral epicondylitis, focusing on cervical spine, while also investigating its influence on central sensitization in relation to lateral epicondylitis.

30 - 50 years of age All Phase N/A

Assessment of Pressure Pain Threshold (PPT) and Conditioned Pain Modulation (CPM) After Effect in Patients With and Without Tennis Elbow (TE)

This study at Hashemite University looks at how people with and without tennis elbow (AKA lateral elbow tendinopathy) feel pressure pain and how their bodies briefly "turn down" pain after a cold stimulus. Participants complete brief questionnaires (basic demographics without names, a tennis-elbow symptom form, and a physical-activity form) and …

- 60 years of age All Phase N/A

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