# Eccentric Isokinetic Rehabilitation for Chronic Lateral Epicondylitis in Female Swimmers: A Randomized Controlled Trial of Bilateral Neuromuscular Adaptations and Functional Performance

**Authors:** Wissem Dhahbi, Hatem Ghouili, Halil İbrahim Ceylan, Nessrine Adhadhi, Souhail Bchini, Manel Bessifi, Nagihan Burçak Ceylan, Valentina Stefanica, Nejmeddine Ouerghi, Nadhir Hammami

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/medicina62030494 · 2026-03-05

## TL;DR

Eccentric isokinetic training improves strength and function in female swimmers with chronic tennis elbow better than passive motion.

## Contribution

Demonstrates that eccentric isokinetic training leads to better neuromuscular adaptations and functional gains in swimmers with lateral epicondylitis.

## Key findings

- Eccentric training improved push-up performance by 3.21 repetitions more than passive motion.
- Explosive power increased by 0.35 m more in the eccentric group.
- Eccentric training produced balanced bilateral strength gains unlike passive motion.

## Abstract

Background and Objectives: This study investigated the efficacy of eccentric isokinetic muscle strengthening versus passive motion protocols on neuromuscular function and performance capacity in female swimmers with chronic lateral epicondylitis. Materials and Methods: Twenty-five swimmers (age 46.1 ± 3.1 years) with lateral epicondylitis exceeding three months’ duration completed a randomized controlled trial comparing eccentric training in Controlled Active Motion mode (experimental group (EG), n = 13) against passive motion in Continuous Passive Motion mode (control group (CG), n = 12). Both groups performed 18 supervised sessions over six weeks (60°/s angular velocity, progressive loading 1–12 sets × 5 repetitions). Bilateral concentric peak torque of elbow extensors and flexors constituted the primary outcomes. Secondary measures included push-up performance, explosive power assessed by the Seated Medicine Ball Chest Push Test, and goniometric range of motion. Linear mixed-effects models and analysis of covariance with baseline adjustment were employed. Results: Eccentric training produced side-specific strength adaptations in elbow flexors (confirmed interaction: F1,23 = 8.56, p = 0.008, ηp2 = 0.271), with the experimental group demonstrating balanced bilateral gains, whereas the control group exhibited asymmetric responses favoring the non-dominant limb. EG demonstrated superior functional gains: push-up repetitions increased 4.15 ± 1.77 versus 2.17 ± 1.27 in CG (adjusted difference = 3.21 repetitions, 95% CI [1.52, 4.90], p = 0.001, d = 1.31), while explosive power improved 0.32 ± 0.09 m versus 0.10 ± 0.06 m (adjusted difference = 0.35 m, 95% CI [0.25, 0.45], p < 0.001, d = 1.20). Range of motion remained unchanged across groups (all p > 0.65). Conclusions: Eccentric isokinetic strengthening confers substantial advantages over passive motion protocols for restoring upper-body muscular endurance and ballistic force production in swimmers with lateral epicondylitis, supporting its integration into rehabilitation frameworks for the management of tendinopathy.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** lateral epicondylitis (MONDO:0001875)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** tendinopathy (MESH:D052256), Lateral Epicondylitis (MESH:D013716)

## Figures

4 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13027445/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13027445