Elbow swelling

Swelling is a common problem after an injury, and if it develops slowly, it usually does not indicate a serious problem. Swelling may limit the range of motion in your elbow, or your elbow may feel tight or stiff when you try to fully bend or straighten it. If range of motion or stiffness improves with home treatment, a visit to a health professional is probably not needed.

Swelling is more serious when:

  • Severe swelling occurs within 30 minutes of an injury. This may be caused by:
  • It occurs with symptoms of impaired blood flow (pale, white, blue, or cold skin).
  • It occurs along with pain, increasing redness, warmth, red streaks, fever, or puslike drainage. This can mean an infection has developed, such as:

Swelling and pain that are not caused by infection or obvious injury may occur with other disorders, such as:

Swelling that does not improve with home treatment can mean that:

  • An injury is not healing normally.
  • An injury is worse than you suspected.
  • A medical condition is causing the swelling or making swelling worse.

Treatment depends on the cause of the swelling.



Author: Jan Nissl, RN, BSLast Updated: April 3, 2007
Medical Review: William M. Green, MD - Emergency Medicine
H. Michael O'Connor, MD - Emergency Medicine

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