UKBouldering.com
the shizzle => diet, training and injuries => Topic started by: Burns on May 03, 2010, 01:15:16 pm
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First post- just looking for experiences relating to this.
I've got triceps tendinitis according to my GP. I'm looking to get an appointment with a private physio, but in the meantime, I thought I would see how common the injury is on UKB. I understand what the triceps do- straighten the arm- and It's most likely an overuse injury from climbing (pressing out, locking off) but I also wonder if swimming may also contribute? I've increased the volume of swimming I do because I've had patellofemoral pain issues (results from mri and consultation next week) preventing me from running.
It's a nice day outside, and I'm sat here with ice tucked under my arm and Ibuprofen for lunch.
How long to rest? How do I know it's safe to climb? What moves should I avoid and are there technique related issues or weaknesses I should watch out for?
Ta.
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I would hazard a guess that your GP is wrong. GPs (obviously) are highly knowledgable and do a very difficult job well, but diagnosing musculo-skeletal problems is not their field. I'd wait and see the physio. Otherwise have a look at the antagonistics basics thread, or look up shoulder instability on the search on here and see if any of it sounds relevant.
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Cheers for the reply.
I read your reply in the antagonists thread. Am I right in thinking, you think this is referred pain? Thing is, if I press the tendon, it hurts. Or, have I got the wrong end of the stick and I have triceps tendonitis because the triceps are trying to stabilise the shoulder?
Excuse the "lay" questions. It's a complex thing I'm just trying to get my head around.
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I tend to agree with sausage. Triceps tendonitis (-osis) would be unusual in a climber, though I guess not impossible. Deep locks and swimming would aggrivate a triceps problem but they would aggrivate other types of elbow problem. Tender spots are a pretty unreliable diagnostically.
If it is any kind of tendonosis, an anti-inflammatory like Ibuprofen is unlikely to help: there is minimal inflammation.
Hard to advise at this stage; let us know what the physio. thinks.
(sausage, have PMed you.)