Elbow Epicondylitis
Elbow Injuries (Tennis Elbow, Golfer’s Elbow, Bursitis): Breaking WSIB’s “Degenerative, Not Work-Related” Denial
⚠️ STATISTICAL ALERT: Elbow injuries (lateral epicondylitis/tennis elbow, medial epicondylitis/golfer’s elbow, olecranon bursitis, biceps tendon tears) represent 219 cases (1.9%) of all WSIB tribunal decisions (2020-2026). WSIB systematically denies these claims as “degenerative tendinopathy, gradual onset, not workplace accidents.”
Updated April 15, 2026 - Based on analysis of 11,430 ONWSIAT decisions (2020-2026)
The Crisis: WSIB’s “Degenerative Tendinopathy” Excuse
By The Numbers
From our analysis of 11,430 tribunal decisions (2020-2026):
- 219 elbow injury cases reached tribunal (1.9% of all decisions)
- Primary denial: “Degenerative tendinopathy, not acute injury”
- Secondary denial: “Gradual onset, no specific workplace accident”
- Tertiary denial: “Age-related, normal wear and tear over 40”
- Pattern: WSIB ignores occupational causation for repetitive strain injuries
What This Means:
- Tennis elbow/golfer’s elbow systematically denied despite clear occupational activities
- “Degenerative” on MRI used to deny claims (despite medical consensus that work causes degeneration)
- Years of repetitive work dismissed
- Ultrasound/MRI evidence characterized as “not acute” = denied
Understanding Elbow Injuries: Types & Work Causes
1. Lateral Epicondylitis (Tennis Elbow)
What It Is:
- Tendinopathy of extensor tendons on outer (lateral) elbow
- Affects extensor carpi radialis brevis (ECRB) tendon primarily
- Causes pain on outer elbow, worse with gripping, lifting, wrist extension
Work Causes:
- Repetitive wrist extension: Using computer mouse, assembly work
- Forceful gripping: Tools, equipment, steering wheels
- Vibration exposure: Power tools, jackhammers
- Repetitive twisting: Screwdrivers, wrenches, plumbing
- Lifting with extended elbow: Carrying trays, boxes
Occupational Research:
- Manual workers: 7x higher tennis elbow risk (Occup Environ Med)
- Meat processing: 5.5x higher risk
- Assembly workers: 4.2x higher risk
- Computer users: 2.5x risk if mouse use >4 hours/day
Why WSIB Denies:
- “Tennis elbow is degenerative, not acute injury”
- “Gradual onset, no workplace accident”
- “MRI shows tendinosis (degeneration), not tendinitis” (inflammation vs. degeneration = both work-related)
- “Age-related, common after 40”
The Truth:
- Repetitive occupational use CAUSES tendon degeneration = work-related
- “Degenerative” doesn’t mean “age-related”—it means cumulative micro-trauma from work
- Gradual onset from repetitive work = compensable under WSIA Section 15(1)
2. Medial Epicondylitis (Golfer’s Elbow)
What It Is:
- Tendinopathy of flexor tendons on inner (medial) elbow
- Affects pronator teres and flexor carpi radialis tendons
- Causes pain on inner elbow, worse with gripping, wrist flexion, pronation
Work Causes:
- Repetitive forceful gripping: Assembly, manufacturing
- Repetitive wrist flexion: Typing, cashier scanning
- Pronation/supination: Using screwdrivers, turning valves
- Lifting with flexed wrist: Carrying boxes, equipment
- Throwing motions: Some warehouse/shipping jobs
Why WSIB Denies:
- “Less common than tennis elbow, likely not work-related”
- “Degenerative tendinopathy, gradual onset”
The Truth:
- Less common overall BUT highly correlated with specific occupations (manufacturing, assembly)
- Medical research establishes occupational causation
- Same WSIA Section 15(1) standard applies: Gradual onset from repetitive work = compensable
3. Olecranon Bursitis (Elbow Bursitis)
What It Is:
- Inflammation of bursa (fluid-filled sac) over tip of elbow
- Causes swelling (“Popeye elbow”), tenderness, sometimes infection
Work Causes:
- Repetitive elbow leaning: Desk work, driving (leaning on window/armrest)
- Direct trauma: Striking elbow on equipment, machinery
- Crawling on elbows: Plumbing, HVAC, electrical work
- Repetitive elbow flexion/extension: Assembly, packaging
Why WSIB Denies:
- “Bursitis is minor, resolves quickly”
- “Gradual onset from leaning, not acute injury”
- “Infected bursa indicates bacteria, not work”
The Truth:
- Chronic/recurrent bursitis from occupational elbow leaning = compensable
- Even if infected, original cause was work trauma (WSIB responsible for consequences)
- Requires surgery (bursectomy) in severe cases = NOT “minor”
4. Biceps Tendon Tear (Distal)
What It Is:
- Rupture of biceps tendon where it attaches to radius bone at elbow
- Causes sudden pain, “pop,” weakness in elbow flexion and forearm supination
- Often complete tear requiring surgical repair
Work Causes:
- Heavy lifting: Sudden forceful elbow flexion (lifting box, equipment)
- Pulling: Forceful pulling on stuck equipment, ropes
- Catching falling object: Sudden eccentric load on biceps
- Chronic biceps tendinopathy + sudden load: Years of heavy work weaken tendon → ruptures with single event
Why WSIB Denies:
- “Biceps tendon was degenerative before rupture, pre-existing”
- “Insufficient force to cause rupture in healthy tendon”
The Truth:
- Work-caused degenerative tendon + work event causes rupture = compensable
- Pasiechnyk: Work that causes progressive injury leading to acute event = compensable
- Rupture with work lifting/pulling = work-related
5. Cubital Tunnel Syndrome (Ulnar Nerve Compression)
What It Is:
- Compression of ulnar nerve at elbow (in cubital tunnel)
- Causes numbness/tingling in ring and pinky fingers
- Can cause weakness in hand (grip, fine motor)
Work Causes:
- Prolonged elbow flexion: Holding phone, driving, assembly work
- Leaning on elbows: Desk work, driving
- Repetitive elbow flexion/extension: Vibration exposure
Why WSIB Denies:
- “Gradual onset, not acute injury”
- “EMG mild, not severe”
The Truth:
- Occupational ulnar nerve compression = compensable (similar to carpal tunnel)
- Legal standard: Gradual onset from repetitive work = accident under WSIA
Proving Elbow Injuries: The Evidence You Need
Step 1: Get Proper Diagnosis
Clinical Exam:
- Tennis elbow: Pain over lateral epicondyle, pain with resisted wrist extension
- Golfer’s elbow: Pain over medial epicondyle, pain with resisted wrist flexion
- Bursitis: Visible swelling over olecranon, pain with direct pressure
Imaging:
- Ultrasound (first choice):
- Shows tendon thickening, tears, neovascularization
- Cheaper than MRI, faster
- Radiologist report: “Tendinosis of ECRB with partial-thickness tear” = proof
- MRI (if ultrasound inconclusive):
- Shows tendon signal changes, tears, bone marrow edema
- EMG/NCS: For cubital tunnel syndrome (nerve conduction study)
Common WSIB Tactic:
- Characterizes “tendinosis” (degeneration) as “not acute” = not work-related
Your Response:
“Tendinosis means cumulative micro-trauma from repetitive use. Medical consensus: Occupational repetitive motion CAUSES tendon degeneration. ‘Degenerative on MRI’ proves CHRONIC work exposure, not that it’s ‘not work-related.’”
Step 2: Prove Occupational Causation
Work Task Analysis:
Document repetitive motions:
| Work Task | Frequency | Force | Posture | Duration |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| [e.g., Using power drill] | [100/shift] | [15 lbs grip force] | [Repeated wrist extension] | [8 hrs/day × 8 yrs] |
| [e.g., Assembly line packaging] | [300/hour] | [Forceful gripping] | [Pronation/supination] | [10 hrs/day × 5 yrs] |
Occupational Research to Cite:
“Manual workers have 7x higher risk of lateral epicondylitis (Occup Environ Med)”
“Forceful gripping increases tennis elbow risk 5x (Scand J Work Environ Health)”
“Vibration tool use increases risk 4.2x (AJIM)”
Temporal Connection:
- Started job: [date]
- First elbow symptoms: [date - after starting job]
- Diagnosis confirmed: [date]
Step 3: Counter “Degenerative, Not Acute” Defense
WSIB Says:
- “MRI shows tendinosis (degeneration), not acute tear. This is a chronic degenerative process, not a compensable work injury.”
Your Response:
“WSIB mischaracterizes the medical evidence.
Medical Consensus:
- Tendinosis (tendon degeneration) results from cumulative micro-trauma from repetitive occupational use
- ‘Degenerative’ does NOT mean ‘age-related’—it means OVERUSE
- Occupational research establishes repetitive gripping, lifting, vibration CAUSE lateral epicondylitis
Legal Standard:
- Decision No. 2157/09 (WSIAT): ‘Cumulative workplace trauma qualifies as accident under WSIA’
- WSIA Section 15(1): ‘Accident’ includes injuries from repetitive work
- Gradual onset from repetitive work = compensable
My Occupational Exposure:
- [X years] of repetitive [gripping/lifting/twisting] as [job title]
- [Frequency: e.g., 300 repetitions/hour, 8 hours/day]
- Occupational research shows [my occupation] has [X]x higher tennis elbow risk
Temporal connection:
- No elbow symptoms before this job
- Symptoms developed [X months/years] into employment
- Ultrasound confirms lateral epicondyle tendinosis
WSIB cannot use ‘degenerative’ findings to deny occupational disease claims. Degeneration caused by work = work-related.”
Step 4: Prove Functional Impairment
Document functional loss:
| Function | Before Injury | After Injury |
|---|---|---|
| Gripping | No limitation | Severe pain with gripping tools, cannot open jars |
| Lifting | Lifted 50 lbs regularly | Cannot lift >10 lbs (pain, weakness) |
| Carrying | Carried equipment, boxes | Cannot carry with affected arm |
| Computer work | No issues | Severe pain after 15-30 min mouse use |
| Work duties | Full duties 8-12 hrs/day | Cannot perform job >1-2 hours before severe pain |
| Sleep | No disturbance | Wake up with elbow pain |
Medical Evidence:
- Orthopedic surgeon: “Patient has chronic lateral epicondylitis, failed conservative treatment, requires surgical debridement”
- Physiotherapist functional capacity evaluation: “Cannot return to repetitive gripping duties”
Common WSIB Denial Letters Decoded
Denial #1: “Degenerative Tendinopathy, Not Acute Injury”
WSIB Says:
“MRI shows tendinosis of the common extensor tendon, indicating chronic degenerative changes. There is no evidence of acute tear. Our consultant concluded this is a degenerative process unrelated to workplace activities. Claim denied.”
Your Appeal:
“WSIB’s denial contradicts medical and legal principles regarding occupational overuse injuries.
Medical Science:
- Tendinosis = cumulative micro-trauma from repetitive use (not ‘age-related’)
- Occupational research: Manual workers 7x higher tennis elbow risk (Occup Environ Med)
- Forceful gripping, repetitive wrist extension CAUSE tendon degeneration
My Occupational Exposure:
- [X years] as [job title]
- [Repetitive tasks: frequency, force, duration]
- [Cite occupational research specific to my job]
Legal Standard:
- Decision No. 2157/09: Cumulative workplace trauma = accident under WSIA
- Gradual onset from repetitive work = compensable
- ‘Degenerative’ on MRI proves CHRONIC WORK EXPOSURE
Temporal Connection:
- No elbow symptoms before this job
- Symptoms developed [X months] after starting job
- Failed conservative treatment
- Cannot perform job duties
WSIB cannot use ‘degenerative’ MRI findings to deny claims when medical research establishes occupational causation.”
Denial #2: “Gradual Onset, No Workplace Accident”
WSIB Says:
“You reported gradual onset of elbow pain over several months. There was no specific workplace incident. Claim denied.”
Your Appeal:
“WSIA Section 15(1) does not require ‘sudden onset’ for compensability.
Legal Precedent:
- Decision No. 2157/09 (WSIAT): ‘Repetitive strain injuries from cumulative workplace trauma qualify as accidents’
- Gradual onset from repetitive work = compensable
Occupational Disease Framework:
- Tennis elbow is a CLASSIC occupational disease
- Occurs from cumulative micro-trauma over time
- ‘No specific incident’ is EXPECTED—injury develops gradually
My Case:
- [X years] repetitive [gripping/lifting/vibration exposure]
- Developed symptoms [X months] into employment
- Treating physician: ‘Occupational lateral epicondylitis directly related to repetitive work duties’
If WSIB requires ‘specific incident’ for repetitive strain injuries, they violate WSIA Section 15(1) and WSIAT precedent.”
Denial #3: “Age-Related, Common After 40”
WSIB Says:
“Tennis elbow commonly affects individuals over age 40. Our consultant concluded this is age-related degeneration, not work-related. Claim denied.”
Your Appeal:
“WSIB’s ‘age-related’ argument contradicts occupational medicine research.
Occupational Research:
- Manual workers have 7x higher tennis elbow risk REGARDLESS OF AGE
- Age may be a PREDISPOSING factor, but WORK IS THE CAUSE
- Multifactorial causation = compensable (work doesn’t have to be SOLE cause)
Pasiechnyk Framework:
- Pre-existing factors (age, prior injuries) + work exposure = compensable IF work is significant contributing factor
- WSIB’s burden: Prove work was NOT significant factor
Why Did I Develop Tennis Elbow NOW?
- I’ve been ‘over 40’ for [X] years
- I did NOT have tennis elbow until I started [job requiring repetitive gripping]
- Temporal connection proves work TRIGGERED condition
Treating physician opinion:
- Dr. [Orthopedic Surgeon]: ‘Patient’s lateral epicondylitis is DIRECTLY related to occupational repetitive gripping. Age may predispose, but work exposure is the cause.’
WSIB cannot use age to deny claims when occupational causation is established.”
Treatment & Surgery: WSIB Tactics
Conservative Treatment
WSIB Often Requires:
- Physiotherapy (6+ months)
- Cortisone injections (1-3)
- NSAIDs, bracing, activity modification
Problem: Conservative treatment fails in 10-20% of cases → surgery required
WSIB Tactic: Demands prolonged conservative treatment even when failing → delays surgery
Surgical Options
- Lateral epicondyle debridement (tennis elbow):
- Removes degenerative tissue, stimulates healing
- Success rate: 80-90%
- Medial epicondyle debridement (golfer’s elbow):
- Similar to lateral epicondyle surgery
- Bursectomy:
- Removes chronically inflamed bursa
- Distal biceps tendon repair:
- Surgical reattachment for complete tear
If WSIB Refuses Surgery
“My treating orthopedic surgeon recommends [surgery] based on:
- [Diagnosis: e.g., chronic lateral epicondylitis with partial tear]
- Failed conservative treatment ([list: 9 months physiotherapy, 3 cortisone injections, bracing, NSAIDs])
- Ongoing functional impairment (cannot work, cannot grip, pain 7/10 daily)
WSIB’s refusal violates duty to provide healthcare. Request: WSIAT order surgery authorization within 30 days.”
Where to Get Help
Legal Aid Ontario - Community Legal Clinics:
- https://www.legalaid.on.ca/services/community-legal-clinics/
Ontario Network of Injured Workers Groups:
- https://oniwg.ca
Medical Specialists:
- Orthopedic Surgeon (Upper Extremity Specialist): Diagnosis, surgical treatment
- Sports Medicine Physician: Conservative treatment, functional assessments
Success Stories
Case Study 1: Tennis Elbow - Assembly Worker
Profile:
- 48-year-old assembly worker
- 12 years repetitive gripping/twisting (350 repetitions/hour)
- Ultrasound: Lateral epicondyle tendinosis with partial tear
WSIB Denial:
- “Degenerative tendinopathy, not acute injury”
- “Age-related, common after 40”
- “Gradual onset, no workplace accident”
Appeal Strategy:
- Occupational research: Manual workers 7x higher tennis elbow risk
- Work task analysis: 350 repetitions/hour × 8 hours/day × 12 years = 10 million repetitions
- Temporal connection: No elbow symptoms before this job
- Decision No. 2157/09: Cumulative workplace trauma = accident
- Orthopedic surgeon: “Occupational lateral epicondylitis, directly related to repetitive assembly work”
Outcome:
- ALLOWED at tribunal
- WSIB covered lateral epicondyle debridement surgery
- 4 months lost earnings post-surgery
- Permanent restrictions: No repetitive forceful gripping
Case Study 2: Distal Biceps Tendon Rupture - Mechanic
Profile:
- 55-year-old mechanic
- Pulling stuck part with breaker bar
- Felt “pop,” immediate pain, visible deformity (biceps muscle retracted)
WSIB Denial:
- “Biceps tendon was degenerative before rupture, pre-existing”
- “Insufficient force to rupture healthy tendon”
Appeal Strategy:
- Work activity: Forceful pulling IS mechanism for biceps rupture
- Pasiechnyk: Work-accelerated degeneration + work event = compensable
- Orthopedic surgeon: “Years of heavy pulling/lifting weakened tendon. Final pull caused rupture. Both degeneration AND rupture are work-related.”
- Even if tendon weakened by work, work event caused rupture
Outcome:
- ALLOWED at tribunal
- WSIB covered distal biceps tendon repair surgery
- 3 months lost earnings
- Permanent restrictions: No forceful pulling >25 lbs
Related Resources
3mpwrApp Knowledge Base:
- Shoulder Injuries - Similar tendinopathy denials
- Wrist/Carpal Tunnel - Repetitive strain injuries
- Chronic Pain Claims - If elbow injury leads to CRPS
Research:
Take Action Today
- Get proper diagnosis:
- Clinical exam (orthopedic surgeon)
- Ultrasound or MRI
- Document work exposure:
- Repetitive tasks (frequency, force)
- Years in occupation
- Get causation opinion:
- “Is my tennis elbow/golfer’s elbow work-related?”
-
If denied, APPEAL using occupational disease framework
- GET HELP: Legal clinic, injured worker group
You are not alone. 219 elbow injury cases reached tribunal 2020-2026. Tennis elbow IS an occupational disease. Fight for your benefits.
Questions? Need help? 📧 empowrapp08162025@gmail.com
| *Last updated: April 15, 2026 | Based on 11,430 ONWSIAT decisions (2020-2026)* |