What is shin pain?
Shin pain is pain on the front of your lower leg below the
knee and above the ankle. It can hurt directly over your
shinbone (tibia) or over the muscles that are on the inner
or outer side of the tibia. Shin pain has often been called
shin splints.
How does it occur?
Shin pain generally occurs from overuse. This problem can
come from irritation of the muscles or other tissues in the
lower leg or from a stress fracture. This injury is most
common in runners who increase their mileage or the
intensity of their running, or who change the surface on
which they are running.
When you walk or run your foot normally flattens out a small
amount when it strikes the ground. If your foot flattens
out more than normal it is called over-pronation.
Over-pronation can contribute to shin pain.
Some specific conditions that cause shin pain include:
- Stress fracture: This is a hairline crack in one of the
lower leg bones, the tibia or fibula.
- Medial stress syndrome: This is when the muscles that
attach to the inner side of your tibia are inflamed.
- Compartment syndrome: Your anterior compartment is an
area in your leg that contains the muscles that point
your foot and toes toward your body. Your lateral
compartment contains muscles that move your foot and
ankle away from your body. When a compartment is
overused the muscles will become painful.
What are the symptoms?
You have pain over the front part of your lower leg. You
may have pain during exercise, at rest, or both. Stress
fractures of the tibia will give you pain directly over your
shinbone. It will hurt to touch the part of the bone that
is fractured. Stress fractures of the fibula will cause
pain on the outer side of your lower leg. With medial tibial
stress syndrome, you will have pain and tenderness along the
edge of the shinbone, especially along the muscles. With
compartment syndrome the muscles in that area will be
painful. Blood vessels and nerves are also in the anterior
compartment. If the muscles in this compartment become
swollen during exercise they may irritate these nerves or
blood vessels and your foot may become weak, numb, or cold.
How is it diagnosed?
Your health care provider will examine your lower leg. He
or she will decide which part of your shin is the source of
the pain. Your provider may watch you walk or run to see if
you have problems with over-pronation. You may need an
x-ray or a bone scan to check for stress fractures. If your
provider thinks you have compartment syndrome you may need a
test that measures the pressure in your lower leg
compartments. This is done using a needle attached to a
measuring device. They will do this at rest and then again
after exercise.
How is it treated?
Treatment may include:
- Ice: Apply ice packs to your shin for 20 to 30 minutes
every 3 to 4 hours for 2 or 3 days or until the pain goes
away.
- Ice massage: Freeze water in a Styrofoam cup. Peel the
top of the cup away to expose the ice and hold onto the
bottom of the cup while you rub ice over your leg for 5
to 10 minutes.
- Medicine: Take anti-inflammatory medicine as prescribed
by your health care provider.
- Shoe supports: Arch supports (orthotics) help correct
over-pronation. They can be prescribed and custom-made
or you can buy pre-made arch supports at your local
pharmacy, shoe store, or sporting goods store.
- Rehabilitation exercises.
- Surgery: Sometimes with compartment syndrome surgery is
needed. The tissues which form the covering of the
compartments are opened up to reduce the pressure in the
compartments. Some tibial stress fractures also need
surgery.
While you are recovering from your injury, you will need to
change your sport or activity to one that does not make your
condition worse. For example, you may need to bicycle or
swim instead of run. When you begin to run again, you
should wear good shoes and run on soft surfaces.
When can I return to my normal activities?
Everyone recovers from an injury at a different rate.
Return to your activities will be determined by how soon
your leg recovers, not by how many days or weeks it has been
since your injury has occurred. In general, the longer you
have symptoms before you start treatment, the longer it will
take to get better. The goal of rehabilitation is to return
you to your normal activities as soon as is safely possible.
If you return too soon you may worsen your injury.
You may safely return to your activities when, starting
from the top of the list and progressing to the end, each of
the following is true:
- You have full range of motion in the injured leg compared
to the uninjured leg.
- You have full strength of the injured leg compared to the
uninjured leg.
- You can walk straight ahead without pain or limping.
How can I prevent shin pain?
- Since shin pain usually occurs from overuse, be sure to
begin your activities gradually.
- Wear shoes with proper padding and support.
- Run on softer surfaces.
- Warm up properly and stretch the muscles in the front of
your leg and in your calf.
- Do not keep running while you have shin pain or it will
take longer for the pain to go away.
This content is reviewed periodically and is subject to
change as new health information becomes available. The
information is intended to inform and educate and is not a
replacement for medical evaluation, advice, diagnosis or
treatment by a healthcare professional.
Copyright © 2005 McKesson Corporation and/or one of its subsidiaries. All Rights Reserved.