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Running Injury - Shin Splints





What Are Shin Splints?

Shin splints refer to pain anywhere in the vicinity of the shin area (front of calves). The main two types of shin splints are medial shin splints and anterior shin splints.

Medial shin splints refer to pain in the medial aspect of the leg, adjacent to the medial tibia. Tenderness is usually found between 3 and 12 centimeters above the tip of the medial mealleolus at the posteriomedial aspect of the tibia. In laymen’s terms, you have a lot of pain in the lower 2/3rds of the inside of your shin.

Anterior shin splints refers to pain in the anterior tibial region, or laymen’s terms, pain on the outside of your shin area. The involved section of the upper tibia is usually 5 to 8 centimeters long and about 1 to 2 centimeters wide.

What Causes Shin Splints?

The most common causes for medial shin splints are overtraining, pronation, and running on a slanted surface (i.e. crowned roads).

The most common causes for anterior shin splints are tight posterior muscles; imbalance between the posterior and anterior muscles; running on concrete or other hard surfaces; improper shoes with inadequate shock protection; and overtraining.

How to prevent or treat Shin Splints

To prevent or treat medial shin splints:

To prevent or treat anterior shin splints:




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More on Shin Splints from Another Expert

Just one run or walk can cause shin splints. One run or walk can be overtraining for your body...if you start too vigorously, or go too far, or use poor shoes, or exercise on too harsh a surface such as concrete. A stress fracture pain is likely to be a continuous pain and restricted to one spot. Do not run. If you have a more diffuse pain or tenderness in the lower third of the leg on the inside, or along the entire shin, a fracture is less likely. Pain is felt on extending the toes and weight bearing. It hurts if you press the area with your finger. Physiologically, it is an inflammation of the tendons or muscle in this area. Pain eases when you are well warmed up, but resumes at the end of exercise.

Causes of Shin Splints

Prevention of Shin Splints

Treatment of Shin Splints

Compartment Syndrome

Compartment Syndrome is a muscle pain due to the muscles growing faster than the sheath surrounding them. It includes one form of shin splints; it also affects the other smallish muscles of the lower leg. Ice and anti-inflammatories can help, but surgery may be required to allow the muscle more room to expand. Some muscles grow so much that they constrict the blood flow into the sheath...resulting in necrosis (a medical emergency) of the muscle.

Stress Fracture of the Shin Bone (the Tibia)

If you feel pain when you put pressure on the shin...rest. Stress fractures don't show up on x-ray until healing is well under way; they can be confirmed quite early by a bone scan. The dilemma--a fracture requires six to eight weeks non impact exercise to heal. Use non running exercise to maintain muscle tone until you've confirmed if you have a fracture.

Muscle and connective tissue injuries to the front of the leg are due to overtraining -- too many miles before your body has adapted to the load--or by too much fast training on surfaces which are too hard.

Concrete is six times harsher to your shin tissues than asphalt. Asphalt is three or more times harsher on your shin muscles than packed dirt trails. Grass and muddy trails are still softer, and significantly decrease your risk of shin splints.




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