Elbow Pain: Lateral Epicondylitis vs Radial Tunnel vs Cervical Radiculopathy

Upper Limb · 7 min read · 2025-11-15

Introduction

Lateral elbow pain is frequently diagnosed as "tennis elbow" (lateral epicondylitis). While this is the most common cause, two important differentials — radial tunnel syndrome and C6 cervical radiculopathy — can mimic or coexist with it. Failure to identify the correct diagnosis leads to failed treatment.

Lateral Epicondylitis (Tennis Elbow)

Pathology: Tendinopathy of the common extensor origin, primarily extensor carpi radialis brevis (ECRB), at the lateral epicondyle.

Pain location: Directly over or within 1–2cm of the lateral epicondyle.

Pain triggers: Gripping, wrist extension against resistance, lifting objects (especially with the palm down).

Examination:

  • Point tenderness at the lateral epicondyle
  • Pain with resisted wrist extension (Cozen's test)
  • Pain with resisted middle finger extension (Maudsley's test — ECRB inserts near the 3rd metacarpal)
  • Full, pain-free range of elbow motion
  • Normal neurological exam

Radial Tunnel Syndrome

Pathology: Compression of the posterior interosseous nerve (PIN) within the radial tunnel — approximately 3–4 cm distal to the lateral epicondyle, as the nerve passes through the supinator muscle (arcade of Frohse).

Pain location: Distal and anterior to the lateral epicondyle. The maximum tenderness is over the radial tunnel, NOT the epicondyle itself.

Pain triggers: Similar to epicondylitis — resisted supination and wrist extension. However, the pain is deeper and more vague.

Examination:

  • Tenderness 3–4cm distal to the lateral epicondyle (over the supinator muscle mass)
  • Pain with resisted supination of the forearm
  • Pain with resisted extension of the middle finger (Rule of Nines)
  • No weakness initially (pain predominates; weakness appears in advanced cases/PIN syndrome)
  • Night pain and aching are common

Key difference from epicondylitis: The point of maximum tenderness is DISTAL to the epicondyle, not at it.

C6 Cervical Radiculopathy

Pathology: Compression of the C6 nerve root, which innervates the wrist extensors and supplies sensation to the thumb and index finger.

Pain pattern: Neck pain radiating down the arm to the lateral elbow and forearm. May be confused with epicondylitis if the neck component is mild.

Examination:

  • Neck pain or stiffness
  • Spurling's test positive
  • Weakness of biceps and/or wrist extensors (C6 myotome)
  • Reduced biceps reflex
  • Sensory changes in the thumb and index finger
  • Elbow examination is normal (no tenderness at the epicondyle or radial tunnel)

Comparison

Clinical Pearl

Up to 5% of patients diagnosed with "tennis elbow" actually have radial tunnel syndrome. If a patient has failed standard epicondylitis treatment (rest, bracing, physiotherapy, injection) after 6–8 weeks, relocate the point of maximum tenderness — if it's distal to the epicondyle over the supinator, you've been treating the wrong diagnosis.

Summary

Tenderness at the epicondyle = lateral epicondylitis. Tenderness 3–4cm distal over the supinator = radial tunnel syndrome. Neck pain + arm radiation + reflex changes = C6 radiculopathy. Always palpate precisely — the location of tenderness is the diagnosis.

Try free upper limb cases