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  • Sports Medicine · Overview

    Tennis Injuries

    Tennis is a sport of repetition and explosive movement — taxing the shoulder, elbow and knee in particular. Most of its injuries are overuse problems that respond well to load and technique work.

    summarize At a glance
    Most affected
    Shoulder, elbow, knee
    Injury type
    Mostly overuse
    Typical treatment
    Usually non-surgical
    Recovery
    Weeks to months
    Racquet sports
    01

    Tennis and overuse

    Tennis combines repetitive overhead serving, forceful groundstrokes and rapid changes of direction. This loads the shoulder and elbow through thousands of repetitions, and the knee through constant stopping and starting.

    As a result, most tennis injuries are overuse problems that build gradually — meaning technique, equipment and training load are central to both treatment and prevention.

    02

    Common tennis injuries

    • checkTennis elbow pain on the outer elbow from repetitive gripping and backhands.
    • checkRotator cuff & impingement from repetitive overhead serving.
    • checkShoulder labral irritation in heavy servers.
    • checkPatellar tendinopathy “jumper’s knee” from explosive movement.
    • checkAnkle sprains from rapid changes of direction.
    03

    Causes & risk factors

    • High training volume with inadequate recovery.
    • Faulty technique loading the elbow or shoulder.
    • Inappropriate racquet grip size, string tension or weight.
    • Weakness in the shoulder blade and rotator cuff.
    04

    Treatment & prevention

    The large majority of tennis injuries are managed without surgery, by settling symptoms and addressing the cause.

    self_improvementFirst-line

    Rehabilitation

    Targeted strengthening of the cuff, shoulder blade and forearm restores capacity and eases pain.

    sports_tennisSupportive

    Technique & equipment

    Coaching adjustments and the right racquet set-up reduce the load that caused the problem.

    tuneSupportive

    Load management

    Sensible scheduling and recovery prevent the overload that drives most injuries.

    05

    Return to the court

    Most players improve over several weeks to a few months with rehabilitation and technique work, returning to full play. Staying injury-free comes down to maintaining strength, sound technique and a sensible balance of play and recovery.

    Medically reviewed by
    Dr. Yousef Muhammad, M.D.
    Senior Consultant · Orthopedic Surgery & Sports Medicine

    German board-certified orthopedic surgeon specialising in arthroscopic knee and shoulder surgery, sports injuries, and joint replacement.

    M.D. · PhD
    FEBOT · DGOOC
    AAOS · ESSKA
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