The VerdictMODERATE CONVICTION

This is a loading problem at the back of your elbow, not a tennis-elbow cousin and not something rest fixes — modify the pressing, load the tendon slowly, follow the rules.

Right now, try this. Stand facing a wall. Place your palms flat at shoulder height, elbows bent to about 90 degrees. Lean slightly into the wall and press — your triceps are working, but your elbow is NOT straightening. Hold 30 to 45 seconds, repeat 4 times. If you can do that with effort but pain at 3 out of 10 or below, you have a starting point.

  1. What this actually is: irritation at the spot where the triceps muscle becomes a tendon and plugs into the back of the elbow bone — not a rip, not tennis elbow, and not something rest will fix on its own.
  2. The one thing that makes it worse: heavy pressing-lockout work in someone whose tendon has lost capacity. Close-grip bench, weighted dips, JM press — repeat the dose and you walk into a partial tear.
  3. The first thing to start doing: isometric holds at mid-range first, then slow controlled tricep work, then heavy slow resistance over 8 to 24 weeks. Drop heavy dips and close-grip bench for the first 2 to 4 weeks. Substitute floor press or board press.

The triceps anchors into your elbow bone through a wide, fan-shaped tendon — like rope frayed at the spot where it loops over a pulley. Heavy lockouts at the top of a bench press or a dip drag the rope across the pulley one more time each rep. The pain isn't the fraying. It's your nervous system flagging that the overnight repair crew can't keep up with the daily damage. Rest stops the damage but the repair crew never gets stronger; slow heavy loading trains the rope to take the work.

SH
Dr. Seth Holbrook, DPT — Doctor of Physical Therapy • Coach to 300+ clients
I built The Verdict to cut through recycled health advice and show what the evidence actually supports.
The Verdict · Physio

Triceps Tendinopathy

Posterior elbow pain at the back of the upper arm where the triceps inserts onto the olecranon — almost exclusively a lifter and thrower problem.

Conviction · Moderate Elbow · Insertional

What Works

Triceps loading rehabilitation — cinematic anatomy
Tier 1 · Strong direction · class-extrapolated

Progressive phased loading

The triceps-specific RCT evidence does not exist. The protocol is class-extrapolated from lateral epicondylalgia, Achilles HSR (Beyer 2015), and insertional Achilles (Rompe 2008). The principle is uncontroversial across the tendinopathy class: progressive load, not rest.

Exercise Prescription

Phase 1 — Isometric (wk 1–4)

Wall-press / band-resisted elbow extension mid-range hold. 25→70% MVC. 30–45 s × 4–5 sets, daily. Pain ≤ 3/10.

Phase 2 — Slow Controlled (wk 4–8)

Cable triceps pushdown + modified skull-crusher (limited end-range). 3×10–15 RPE 4–6. 3-s eccentric. 2–3×/wk.

Phase 3 — Heavy Slow Resistance (wk 8–24)

Heavy cable extension, weighted dip at controlled depth, close-grip bench (floor → board → pin → full). 3×6–8 RPE 7–8. 3-s eccentric. 2–3×/wk.

Lift Substitution (wk 1–4+)

Drop close-grip bench, weighted dips, JM press. Substitute floor press / board press / pin-press. Continue lower-body and non-provocative upper-body at full load.

The active ingredient is not the lift selection. It is the rules: pain ≤ 3/10 during loading, return to baseline within 24 hours. Break either rule and step back one phase.

Show Tier 2 and Tier 3 →
Tier 2 · Refractory adjuncts

ESWT and US-guided percutaneous tenotomy

Extracorporeal shockwave therapy is supported by Rompe 2008 insertional Achilles class evidence and is the strongest refractory adjunct candidate for insertional patterns. Ultrasound-guided percutaneous tenotomy has direct triceps evidence: Furia 2017 (calcific triceps tendinosis in a competitive lifter, case report) and Wirth 2019 (mixed-elbow refractory cohort including triceps). Both reserved for cases that have completed 12+ weeks of compliant loading without progress, never as first-line.

Tier 3 · Bridging only

NSAIDs, single corticosteroid injection, pain neuroscience education

Short-course NSAIDs and a single corticosteroid injection are a short-term diagnostic or pain-modulation bridge, never stand-alone treatment. Class evidence (Coombes 2010 Lancet pattern) shows short-term pain relief with long-term harm — repeated cortisone increases rupture risk and accelerates tendon degeneration. Pain neuroscience education addresses kinesiophobia in middle-aged male lifters and counters the "your triceps is degenerating" nocebo language that drives total rest.

What Doesn't Work

  • Total rest as first-line treatment. Opposes the tendinopathy paradigm. Depletes loading capacity and prolongs symptoms.
  • Repeated corticosteroid injections. Class harm signal — increases rupture risk, accelerates degeneration.
  • Imaging-driven escalation in symptomatic-but-no-tear patients. Morphology is not a treatment indicator without a structural lesion that changes the plan.
  • Mid-substance tennis-elbow dosing rules applied to the insertional triceps. Insertional pattern at the olecranon needs modified-range loading and different ESWT logic.
  • Stopping pressing with no return plan. Demotivating, undertreats, and pushes lifters into independent self-rehab without the pain-monitoring rule.

Return to Training

Criterion-based, not date-based. Tick each box before progressing to full pressing volume.

Red Flags — See a Doctor That Day

  • Sudden pop with weakness extending your arm against gravity. Suspected complete distal triceps rupture. The surgical repair window is 2 to 3 weeks. Do not load. Refer urgently.
  • Noticeable extension strength loss on the painful side (more than 50% drop on resisted-extension testing) — possible partial tear. Image first, then refer.
  • Hot, swollen, red back-of-elbow with feeling unwell. Possible crystal arthropathy, gout, or septic olecranon bursitis. Same-day GP or A&E for aspiration.
  • Bilateral or atraumatic onset in a non-lifter, especially with other joints involved, morning stiffness, or systemic symptoms. Possible inflammatory enthesopathy — refer GP for rheumatology workup.
  • Current or recent fluoroquinolone antibiotic (ciprofloxacin, levofloxacin) in the past 30 days, or on statins, or using anabolic steroids. These weaken tendons. See GP for medication review and slow the loading.
  • Pediatric or adolescent presentation with open growth plates and posterior elbow pain. Different problem — refer pediatric orthopedics for apophyseal traction differential.
If any of these apply, stop loading and book an urgent appointment. Don't wait the protocol out.
The Takeaway

Right now, try this. Stand facing a wall. Place your palms flat at shoulder height, elbows bent to roughly 90 degrees. Lean slightly into the wall and press — your triceps are working, but your elbow is NOT straightening. Hold 30 to 45 seconds, repeat 4 sets. If you can do that with effort but pain at 3 out of 10 or below, you have a starting point and a daily exercise.

Conviction

Moderate · Endpoint-stratified

High on the diagnostic framework: classify before treating, dynamometry as the decision gate, fluoroquinolone-statin-anabolic-steroid rupture-risk class, active loading beats rest.

Moderate on the extrapolated phased-loading protocol and on insertional-pattern rules at the olecranon.

Low on triceps-specific numeric dosing precision. Low-Moderate on ESWT and US-guided percutaneous tenotomy as refractory-only adjuncts.

Debunked-Low for total rest as first-line, repeated corticosteroid as stand-alone, and imaging-driven escalation in symptomatic-but-no-tear patients.

What would change the loading protocol

A triceps-specific RCT — 60 or more chronic distal triceps tendinopathy patients without partial tear on imaging, randomized to HSR (3×6–8 RPE 7–8 × 12 wk) vs sham loading vs wait-and-see, with primary endpoint a triceps-VISA equivalent at 12 and 52 weeks. Either a different optimal rep-load configuration or a null finding on HSR would force a rewrite of the dose-response table.

What would change the iatrogenic-class conviction

A large registry of 500-plus triceps tendinopathy presentations, stratifying outcomes by iatrogenic class exposure (fluoroquinolone, statin, AAS) versus non-iatrogenic, with rupture-conversion rates at 12 months. Would convert iatrogenic-class conviction from MODERATE direction to HIGH magnitude.

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The Full Picture — Anatomy, Diagnosis & Evidence

What's Actually Going On

Triceps mechanism — distal triceps insertion at olecranon

The distal triceps inserts as a wide, fan-shaped attachment over the olecranon — the bony point at the back of the elbow. That insertional architecture matters. Mechanically, the distal triceps insertion is closer to insertional Achilles tendinopathy than to mid-substance lateral epicondylalgia. Translation: the loading rules for insertional Achilles (modified-range progression, stronger ESWT response in refractory cases — Rompe 2008) apply here.

The pathology follows the Cook & Purdam tendinopathy continuum: reactive → tendon disrepair → degenerative tendinosis → partial tear → complete rupture. The drift along the continuum is driven by mismatch between tendon loading capacity and applied load, not by classical inflammation. Most chronic presentations are degenerative tendinosis, not tendinitis — which is why anti-inflammatory pharmacotherapy is symptom modulation, not treatment.

Three predictable contexts cause it. Heavy pressing-lockout work (close-grip bench, weighted dips, JM press, board press, heavy push-ups) repeatedly loads the olecranon insertion at end-range elbow extension. Forceful repetitive extension in throwing follow-through (javelin, baseball) loads the same insertion under sport-specific demand. Iatrogenic class membership — fluoroquinolones, statins, anabolic-androgenic steroids — alters tendon collagen architecture and accelerates progression along the continuum, with documented complete ruptures in the fluoroquinolone class evidence (Patel 2017).

How to Identify It

Posterior elbow assessment — distal triceps palpation and resisted extension

Subjective hallmarks: aching at the back of the elbow localized to the olecranon, sharp pain on resisted elbow extension at end-range, history almost always names a specific lift (close-grip bench, weighted dips, JM press) or a throwing sport.

  • Resisted elbow extension at end-range — pain at the distal triceps insertion is the most informative provocation. Sn/Sp: DATA UNAVAILABLE for triceps; class evidence supports use
  • Palpation of the distal triceps at the olecranon — discrete, localized, reproducible tenderness. Distinct from olecranon bursa (anterior on palpation) and from epicondyles (lateral / medial). Triceps-specific Sn/Sp: DATA UNAVAILABLE
  • Handheld dynamometry — extension strength — the single most informative objective tool. <25% deficit = load; ≥50% deficit = image and refer; acute pop + objective weakness = urgent surgical referral. Class-conventional thresholds
  • Bisset 2018 BJSM systematic literature review on elbow exam shows that individual tests have limited diagnostic accuracy. The combination — history + localized palpation + resisted-extension provocation + dynamometry — outperforms any single test. SR-level direction-supported

The Debate — CPG vs Recent Evidence

No triceps-specific Clinical Practice Guideline exists as of 2026-05-18. The OSU/Wexner Tendinopathy CPG is the closest governing framework. NICE and APTA have no triceps-tendinopathy-specific guidance. The conflicts below are between traditional teaching and the tendinopathy-paradigm class evidence.

Older Position

"Rest until pain resolves, then return to activity." Standard pre-2010 orthopedic advice.

Current Evidence

Active loading (isometric → concentric → HSR) is first-line. Total rest delays recovery. Class evidence: Beyer 2015, Rompe 2007. Cook & Purdam 2009 continuum is the operating model.

Older Position

"Treat as inflammation. NSAIDs + steroid injection." Tendinitis framing.

Current Evidence

Chronic tendon pathology is degenerative tendinosis, not classical inflammation. Repeated cortisone increases rupture risk. Coombes 2010 Lancet pattern. Loading first; cortisone only as a short-term bridge.

Older Position

"Triceps responds like lateral epicondylalgia — apply tennis-elbow dosing rules." Magnussen 2003 narrative.

Current Evidence

The olecranon insertion is mechanically closer to insertional Achilles. Modified-range loading and stronger ESWT response in refractory cases. Rompe 2008 insertional Achilles class evidence governs.

Honest Limitations

1. Triceps-specific RCT desert

No exercise-based RCT in the retrieved literature uses triceps tendinopathy as the primary population. Every dosing parameter (rep ranges, tempo, frequency) is class-extrapolated from lateral epicondylalgia, Achilles tendinopathy, and the general tendinopathy CPG. The numbers are direction-supported and threshold-imprecise. Adjust by individual response, not by trial-prescribed numbers.

2. Self-managing lifter population mismatch

Class evidence comes from supervised physical-therapy cohorts. Most triceps presentations are recreational and competitive lifters who self-manage in the gym. Adherence to RPE-controlled tempo, pain-monitoring rules, and the 24-hour flare rule collapses under training-ego pressure. Coach the rules harder than the exercises — the rules are the active ingredient.

3. Iatrogenic-class detection failure

Fluoroquinolone, statin, and anabolic-androgenic steroid exposure are routinely missed at first presentation. Primary-care prescriptions of "activity" without medical review in these populations risk rupture conversion. Patel 2017 directly documents triceps ruptures following fluoroquinolone exposure. Screen at first session.

The Nuance

Surgery vs conservative — triceps insertion nuance

Surgery is reserved for the structural lesions: complete distal triceps rupture (urgent, 2 to 3 week window for best surgical outcomes) and persistent partial tear with extension strength deficit ≥ 50% that fails 3 months of compliant loading. Most triceps tendinopathy presentations in the lifting population resolve with phased conservative loading + lift substitution over 8 to 24 weeks. Refractory cases that have completed 12+ weeks of compliant loading without progress can escalate to ESWT or ultrasound-guided percutaneous tenotomy before surgical referral.

The dominant under-screened risk is iatrogenic class membership. A lifter who tweaked the back of his elbow last week and is on a 10-day course of ciprofloxacin needs the antibiotic flagged to his GP and a slower loading progression — not an aggressive Phase 3 protocol. The cost of missing this is rupture conversion. The cost of catching it is two minutes of history-taking.

Sources

  1. Beyer R et al. (2015). Heavy Slow Resistance Versus Eccentric Training as Treatment for Achilles Tendinopathy: A Randomized Controlled Trial. Am J Sports Med. PMID 26018970. Class-evidence anchor.
  2. Rompe JD et al. (2008). Eccentric loading compared with shock wave treatment for chronic insertional achilles tendinopathy. J Bone Joint Surg Am. PMID 18171957. Insertional-pattern class anchor governing the distal triceps insertion logic.
  3. Rompe JD et al. (2007). Eccentric loading, shock-wave treatment, or a wait-and-see policy for tendinopathy of the main body of tendo Achillis. Am J Sports Med. PMID 17244902.
  4. Rompe JD et al. (2009). Eccentric loading versus eccentric loading plus shock-wave treatment for midportion achilles tendinopathy. Am J Sports Med. PMID 19088057.
  5. Bisset L, Vicenzino B. (2018). Physical examination of the elbow, what is the evidence? A systematic literature review. Br J Sports Med. doi:10.1136/bjsports-2016-096712.
  6. Patel A et al. (2017). Triceps Ruptures After Fluoroquinolone Antibiotics: A Report of 2 Cases. Sports Health. doi:10.1177/1941738117713686. Direct triceps iatrogenic-class evidence.
  7. Furia JP et al. (2017). Ultrasonic Percutaneous Tenotomy for Recalcitrant Calcific Triceps Tendinosis in a Competitive Lifter. Curr Sports Med Rep. doi:10.1249/JSR.0000000000000353.
  8. Wirth K et al. (2019). Ultrasound-guided tenotomy improves physical function and decreases pain for tendinopathies of the elbow. J Shoulder Elbow Surg. doi:10.1016/j.jse.2019.06.011. Mixed-elbow refractory cohort including triceps.
  9. Magnussen RA, Taylor DC. (2003). Elbow tendinopathy: tennis elbow. Clin Sports Med. PMID 14560549. Narrative anchor for the elbow tendinopathy family.
  10. Nirschl RP, Ashman ES. (2008). Ten- to 14-year follow-up of the Nirschl surgical technique for lateral epicondylitis. Am J Sports Med. PMID 18055917.
  11. Stevens K et al. (2018). Considerations in the Diagnosis and Accelerated Return to Sport of a Professional Basketball Player. J Orthop Sports Phys Ther. doi:10.2519/jospt.2018.7192.
  12. Deren ME et al. (2016). Tendinopathy and Tendon Rupture Associated with Statins. JBJS Rev. PMID 27490216.
  13. Coombes BK, Bisset L, Vicenzino B. (2010). Efficacy and safety of corticosteroid injections and other injections for management of tendinopathy. Lancet. Class evidence on cortisone short-term benefit + long-term harm.
  14. Cook JL, Purdam CR. (2009). Is tendon pathology a continuum? Br J Sports Med. Canonical tendinopathy continuum framework.
  15. OSU / Wexner Medical Center Tendinopathy Clinical Practice Guideline (2023). Closest governing framework for phased loading.

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