Why Does Tennis Elbow Hurt at Night?
Why Tendon Pain Follows a Paradoxical Pattern
Tennis elbow (lateral epicondylitis) is tendinosis — degenerative collagen disorganization in the ECRB tendon. Unlike muscle pain, which peaks during activity and fades with rest, tendon pain often follows a different pattern. Many patients notice:
- Morning stiffness that loosens up after 10–15 minutes of gentle use
- Relatively manageable pain during moderate activity — the tendon warms up
- Increased pain and aching in the evening after a full day of cumulative loading
- Nighttime aching that can disrupt sleep, especially when lying on the affected arm
Four Specific Reasons Tennis Elbow Hurts at Night
1. Accumulated Daily Loading
Every grip, twist, and lift throughout the day puts cumulative micro-stress on the degenerated ECRB tendon. By evening, this adds up. Patients who work at a computer, play pickleball, or do manual work are loading the tendon hundreds of times per day without realizing it. The evening is when the bill comes due.
2. Sleeping Position
Many people sleep with the arm bent or resting with pressure directly on the outer elbow. This can compress the already-sensitized lateral epicondyle region throughout the night, producing aching that disrupts sleep and is severe in the morning.
3. Inflammatory Response Cycle
While the primary pathology in tennis elbow is tendinosis (degeneration) rather than acute inflammation, there is a low-level neurogenic inflammatory process that tends to be more active when the tendon is at rest at night. Pro-inflammatory cytokines accumulate in the tendon tissue during periods of inactivity — which is why the elbow often feels stiffest first thing in the morning.
4. Loss of Daytime Distraction
During busy daytime hours, cognitive distraction reduces perceived pain intensity. At night, with fewer competing stimuli, the brain pays more attention to the pain signal from the elbow — making the same underlying pain feel more intense.
What Actually Helps Nighttime Tennis Elbow Pain
1. Wrist Extension Night Splint
A simple wrist cock-up splint (holding the wrist in approximately 20–30 degrees of extension) keeps the ECRB tendon in a shortened, resting position overnight. This reduces the neurogenic inflammatory response and significantly improves morning stiffness in most patients. Available at any pharmacy for under $20.
2. Sleep Position Adjustment
Avoid sleeping with the elbow bent or with the outer elbow pressed against the mattress. Sleep on the unaffected side or use a pillow to cushion the elbow in a neutral, slightly extended position.
3. Evening Icing (10–15 Minutes)
Apply ice to the lateral epicondyle for 10–15 minutes 30–60 minutes before bed. This reduces the neurogenic pain sensitization at the tendon attachment without the tissue-damaging effects of prolonged icing. Never apply ice directly to skin — use a cloth barrier.
4. Topical Diclofenac (Voltaren Gel)
Over-the-counter topical diclofenac applied to the outer elbow before bed provides localized anti-inflammatory effect without the systemic side effects of oral NSAIDs. Evidence for topical NSAIDs in lateral epicondylitis is reasonably good for short-term pain relief.
5. Eccentric Exercise Timing
If you're doing eccentric wrist extension exercises as part of your rehabilitation program (you should be), avoid doing them in the evening. Morning or midday exercise gives the tendon time to recover before sleep. Evening eccentric loading can temporarily increase nighttime soreness.
Frequently Asked Questions
Elbow Pain Keeping You Off the Court?
Dr. Chambers treats tennis elbow and pickleball injuries at four Wake County locations. No referral needed — same-day appointments often available.
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