Abstract
The purpose of this study was to determine what changes might be detected on MR images of patients with chronic lateral epicondylitis (tennis elbow) that could explain why some cases are resistant to therapy.Seven consecutive patients with chronic lateral epicondylitis were included. The diagnosis was based on symptoms and signs characteristic of the disease, as determined by each patient's orthopedic surgeon. Three volunteers with normal elbows were control subjects. All patients had MR imaging of the involved elbow, and control subjects had MR imaging of the nondominant elbow. Short tau inversion-recovery (STIR) MR imaging was chosen because of its sensitivity to changes in the water content of muscle and its suppression of the fat signal. The images were analyzed visually and on an MR workstation to measure the signal intensity of the elbow muscles.In all seven patients, MR images showed increased signal intensity of the anconeus muscle. This increase in signal intensity was not observed in the control...

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