Your Cortisone Shot Didn't Work — Here's Why (and What to Do Instead)
Why Cortisone Relieves Pain Temporarily but Fails Long-Term
To understand why cortisone injections often fail for tennis elbow, you need to understand what tennis elbow actually is. Despite the name "epicondylitis" (the "-itis" suffix implying inflammation), tennis elbow is primarily a degenerative condition, not an inflammatory one. Biopsy studies of ECRB tendons in chronic tennis elbow consistently show:
- Disorganized, degenerative collagen — not inflammatory cells
- Increased immature blood vessels (neovascularization)
- Fibroblast proliferation without normal collagen organization
- Minimal or absent classical inflammatory infiltrate
Cortisone is a powerful anti-inflammatory. It works brilliantly for true inflammatory conditions. But if the primary problem is degeneration, not inflammation, cortisone only treats the pain signal — not the underlying pathology. When the cortisone effect wears off (typically 3–6 weeks), the degenerated tendon is still there, and the pain returns.
The Evidence at 12 Months
The landmark Coombes et al. study in The Lancet (2013) compared cortisone injection, physiotherapy, and the combination in a randomized controlled trial. The finding that most patients and many doctors don't know:
- At 4 weeks: Cortisone group had the best outcomes — fastest, most complete pain relief
- At 12 months: Cortisone group had the worst outcomes — worse than physiotherapy alone, and worse than placebo injection
This "injection paradox" — great short-term, terrible long-term — is the central problem with cortisone for lateral epicondylitis.
What Actually Works Instead
1. Eccentric Physical Therapy (Should Have Come First)
The evidence-based first-line treatment that cortisone injections often bypass entirely. Eccentric wrist extension exercises create controlled tendon loading that stimulates the degenerated collagen to remodel into healthy, organized tendon tissue. Takes 8–12 weeks of consistent effort but produces durable results unlike cortisone.
2. PRP Injection (The Right Injection for Tendinosis)
If an injection is what's needed — for patients with severe pain, for those who have failed PT, or for those wanting to accelerate recovery — PRP is the right injection for tennis elbow, not cortisone. PRP delivers concentrated growth factors that target the actual problem: collagen remodeling and tendon regeneration.
Multiple randomized controlled trials show PRP produces superior outcomes compared to cortisone at 6 months and at 12 months. Where cortisone wears off and leaves the tendon worse, PRP initiates structural improvement that continues for months after the injection.
3. Combined Approach (Best Results)
The optimal treatment for chronic tennis elbow that has failed one or more cortisone injections:
- One ultrasound-guided PRP injection to the area of tendinosis
- Resume eccentric PT at 1 week post-injection
- Continue counterforce bracing during all activity
- Activity modification — technique and equipment changes
- Follow-up evaluation at 6–8 weeks to assess response
Cortisone Didn't Work? Next Steps.
If cortisone hasn't solved your tennis elbow — whether it stopped working after a few weeks or never worked at all — PRP injection combined with eccentric physical therapy is the evidence-based next step. Dr. Chambers offers ultrasound-guided PRP at four Wake County locations. No referral needed.
📅 Book an Appointment →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.
📅 Book Online Now