Tennis player's shoulder
PEMF UKTENNIS · ROTATOR CUFF

PEMF therapy for tennis rotator cuff injury

Serve-related rotator cuff issues are the second-most-common tennis injury. PEMF supports tendon recovery.

Reviewed 2026-05-07

In 40 seconds

Rotator cuff tendinopathy is common in tennis players, especially serve-heavy styles. The supraspinatus is most commonly affected. PEMF therapy reduces subacromial inflammation, supports tendon healing, and is widely used alongside shoulder rehabilitation. See our rotator cuff guide for the full clinical picture.

Quick facts

Why this injury happens in this sport

The serve produces the highest joint loading in tennis. Repeated overhead motion under fatigue overloads the rotator cuff. Younger players may also develop labral pathology.

Recovery and return to sport

PEMF + structured rotator cuff rehab (theraband, dumbbell, eventually plyometric) returns most players to full serve strength in 8–12 weeks.

Contraindications

Standard PEMF contraindications: pacemakers, defibrillators, cochlear implants, insulin pumps, electronic implants; active malignancy without specialist clearance; pregnancy (over the abdomen); active infection; epilepsy without GP clearance.

Frequently asked questions

Can I keep serving with rotator cuff pain?

Reduced volume yes, full intensity no. Pushing through accelerates tendon damage.

Surgery decision threshold?

Partial-thickness tears typically managed conservatively. Full-thickness in younger active players often surgical.

Looking for a PEMF clinic near you?

We list every credible PEMF therapy provider in the UK so you can find one near home.