English edit

Etymology edit

epicondyle +‎ -algia

Noun edit

epicondylalgia (usually uncountable, plural epicondylalgias)

  1. pain in an epicondyle
    • 2015 June 18, Camille J. Shanahan et al., “Organisation of the motor cortex differs between people with and without knee osteoarthritis”, in Arthritis Research & Therapy[1], volume 17, →DOI:
      First, less well-defined cortical representations of adjacent segments/muscles (e.g., greater overlap (so-called smudging) or reduced separation of adjacent representations) in low back pain [ 17 ] lateral epicondylalgia [ 10 ] and focal hand dystonia [ 47 ] are related to reduced capacity for independent control of the individual segments/muscles.

Anagrams edit