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Customer Reviews
Items 81 - 100 of 142 reviews
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By Keith Rittenhouse
Date: August 09, 2010
The item was exactly as promised, thanks for helping to spread the ability to strengthen and flex while assuring less chance of injury for our young high school golfer!THANKS!!
Rating: [5 of 5 Stars!]
By Margaret Civil "Marge Civil"
Date: August 08, 2010
I have been using the Thera-band for seven weeks. I forget to use it twice per day and so I am giving myself more time to completely reduce the pain in my golf elbow that I didn't get playing golf. I turned several screws years ago with my left hand. After several cortisone shots I decided to try the Thera-band and I haven't given up.
Rating: [4 of 5 Stars!]
By Linda Shumake
Date: July 20, 2010
I bought this based on reviews by the health and training industries. It has worked wonders for the tendinitis in the left wrist. I would only recommend this for people who are familiar with physical therapy or personal training in the gym. It is easy to use and follow directions, but if you are not sure about your condition, you can injure yourself.
Rating: [5 of 5 Stars!]
By Warici
Date: July 05, 2010
I use the theraband flex bar every day at work. Three months agopain was gradully worse and was losing sleep at night with throbbing pains in the elbow and forarm. Icing arm at work and at home 2 to 4 trimes a day.After the theraband flex bar for 3 weeks the pain is geadually less.I use ice ocassionally at work and sometimes in the night. I also have had 2 cortisone shots in the elbow.I know the problem came on slowly over a lone time but with continued use if the Flexbay and occaional icing I am getting better.
Rating: [4 of 5 Stars!]
By BeeradG
Date: June 24, 2010
The exercises it shows you in the booklet will help. You can definitely feel it, in a good way. I like that the booklet shows you a few different ways to hold it that make a big difference in the work for your arm.
Rating: [5 of 5 Stars!]
By Mojo
Date: June 20, 2010
I had recurring tendonitis in my right elbow. I've been using these bars to do the Tyler Twist (look up this exercise online - there's a good article in the New York Times about it). Started out with the red bar and worked up to the green bar. As far as I'm concerned these bars have completely cured my tendonitis. I still use them to keep up the strength in my arms and prevent the tendonitis from coming back.
Rating: [5 of 5 Stars!]
By S. Lewis
Date: June 12, 2010
It's a good item, the red one is light resistance. Might be best to order the red and the next resistance up so as to have both.
Rating: [5 of 5 Stars!]
By BP "BP"
Date: June 01, 2010
I got Tennis Elbow from golfing in 2003. (pain on the outside elbow joint) I had cortisone shots 2 years in a row to at the suggestions of several people. Each time the pain came back. Then I tried acupuncture. That helped for a while as well, but the pain came back again. I wore the strap on my forearm to lower the pain while golfing. This was tolerable, but not the long term solution.I heard about the flex bar and googled it on the internet. This was over a year ago. This is the only thing that has worked for me. I have been pain free for over a year. I continue to use it occasionally as preventive medicine.
Rating: [5 of 5 Stars!]
By R. G. Young "Eyeguy"
Date: May 27, 2010
It is a solid piece of equipment, but I'm not so sure that it helps with tennis elbow much.
Rating: [2 of 5 Stars!]
By Catlady911
Date: May 27, 2010
I have both golf elbow and tennis elbow in both arms, which is pretty funny considering I don't play and rarely do anything with repetitive motion. I was treated with ultrasound, localized steroids, and given the standard exercises. Only the exercises helped, but I had to do them a couple of times a day, they only provided partial relief, and if I stopped the pain came right back and it would take a week or two of exercising to get them to calm down again.I saw the article about the Tyler Twist with Flexbar in the NY Times, ordered the red one and consider it the best money I ever spent on a health care product.If you go to YouTube you can see better videos of the exercises than were available in 2009 when the Times article appeared. Just search for Theraband Flexbar. The Tyler Twist and Reverse Tyler Twist are really simple exercises - quick and very effective. And I never needed to go up to the next resistance (green). Every couple of months the elbows start to get sore, I whip out the red bar, do the exercises and two days later the pain is gone.If you have either tennis elbow or golf elbow you can't do any better than to use this product. Quick, cheap and easy - can't beat that. Thank you Theraband and Tim Tyler!
Rating: [5 of 5 Stars!]
By Steve Farkash
Date: May 20, 2010
I purchased the heavy version of the Thera-Band Flexbar to do exercises to treat tennis elbow. It is very pliable and soft and surprisingly wimpy in the resistance category. I am in pretty good shape but not especially beefy or muscular. I didn't notice if there was a extra heavy version when purchasing it, but would recommend that version, if available, for such purposes.
Rating: [4 of 5 Stars!]
By R. Borg
Date: May 12, 2010
Use the Thera-Band flexbar as directed for "tennis elbow" and you should get relief as did I. Had to dig deep to find out the recommended regimen is 15 reps, three times a day. I bought both the red and the green bars, and found that either would work just fine--don't need both.
Rating: [5 of 5 Stars!]
By storhund
Date: April 28, 2010
I've been suffering from golfers elbow (ME) for almost a year now and I finally went to the doctor and got some help. I started out with a cortisone shot which relieved the pain immediately and I've been working out at a physical therapy for sports injuries place. My therapist has me doing all kinds of exercises with dumb bells and other things and I had her check out the new york times article on the Tyler Twist. She agreed that this was a good idea and I'm doing the reverse Tyler Twist with reasonable results. I still have pain after playing tennis but with the Band-it and some ice I'm usually feeling good after a day or two and I'm hoping that as I continue to build arm strength that I'll recover completely. I'm sure I could be cured if I just stopped playing tennis but I don't really like that idea.
Rating: [5 of 5 Stars!]
By Gerry
Date: April 13, 2010
I had a mild case of tennis elbow. I had been following my physiotherapist advice for four months without any noticeable gains. I bought the Thera-band after reading an article in the New York Times. It didn't cost much and I figured I didn't have much to lose. I did the recommended exercises three times a day for two weeks and it worked. I now no longer have my mild case of tennis elbow.
Rating: [5 of 5 Stars!]
By Dustin R.
Date: April 05, 2010
As many others have mentions on this site, this product is pretty amazing for relieving tennis elbow soreness. I am 175 lb athletic male and I found the 15lb perfect for perfoming the Tyler twist. I'm talking instant relief from tennis elbow pain. I've tried the arm bands and in comparison they are waste of money for minor tennis elbow pain. Perform the Tyler twist couple times a week and no pain.
Rating: [5 of 5 Stars!]
By Mrs. Lucinda Ramos
Date: March 18, 2010
The blue flexbar is listed for heavier resistance to twisting.I am strong and athletic with only minor tennis elbow issues,and the blue has ample resistance but not too much. Strong guys... buy the blue!If you'd like to try the exercises, before buying a Flexbar,you can use a simple pool toy. I mean the long brightly colored foam tubes that arethree inches in diameter and about five feet long and cost only a couple of bucks.Cut off about a foot and give it a twist!The real Flexbar has much greater range of twist and is very heavy and appears durable.
Rating: [5 of 5 Stars!]
By broker45
Date: March 17, 2010
Most people probably haven't ever heard of eccentric exercise, which is the type of exercise these bars provide. Eccentric, or "negatives" as bodybuilders call them, are basically the lowering portion of an exercise. For instance, if you lift a weight over your head and lower it, the lifting is the "concentric" part, and the lowering of the weight is the "eccentric" part.Without a doubt, this is one interesting tool you can use that will provide eccentric exercise for your wrist muscles. So what's the big deal with eccentrics? Well, there have been studies showing that when people with tendonitis conditions do just the eccentric part of an exercise, they get better. Problem is, there are tennis elbow studies specifically showing that if you do just the concentric (or lifting part) only, you get better too (Martinez-Silvestrini 2005). Therefore, eccentric exercise, as this tool most surely provides, will help tendonitis, but its far from a "magic" cure, and you can achieve the same results as doing "concentrics" with a light dumbbell.Perhaps more importantly though, people with tennis elbow need to know that resistance exercise is just ONE part of what you need to be doing to totally get rid of your tennis elbow.Studies on tennis elbow and eccentric exercise, such as the one I quoted above, had patients ALSO do stretching exercises and I know of no studies that have had people with tennis elbow do just eccentric exercise alone and they've gotten better. Therefore, suggest people with tennis elbow check out this tool, as well as books like Treat Your Own Tennis Elbow for a well-rounded program. Good luck.
Rating: [5 of 5 Stars!]
By S. Carr
Date: February 23, 2010
I concur with the other reviewers who saw the video on the New York Times web site which demonstated how exercises with the FlexBar Exerciser can help relieve tennis elbow. I have not used the exerciser that much but it still has helped a lot. One caution, the green medium tension still requires a lot of strength to perform the twists so you may want to start with the red tension bar.
Rating: [5 of 5 Stars!]
By L. Frey
Date: February 21, 2010
I bought all 3 resistances that these exercisers are offered in, and I highly recommend them. Follow the included instructions for excellent progressive recovery from rotator cuff (shoulder) and tennis elbow tendonitis. These were a great help in my recovery from both problems.
Rating: [5 of 5 Stars!]
By Adam Heidingsfelder "Dr. H"
Date: February 18, 2010
Some recent research has shown that flexion of the wrist extensors while being eccentrically contracted, will accelerate the healing of this repetitive injury. If you have tennis elbow, this is the first thing I would do. I have had success so far with using this for treatment. Beware, the exercise must be done exactly correct, and is easily done incorrectly. see the youtube video. search tennis elbow flexbar. the muscles should be lengthening while contracting. A good thing would be to buy one and bring it to your chiropractor or physical therapist, have them look up the video and do proper instruction. Our practice is Healing Hands Chiropractic in Gulfport MS.[...].
Rating: [5 of 5 Stars!]
Items 81 - 100 of 142 reviews
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