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Growing Pains

Those Annoying Little Aches

By C.J. Johnson

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Parents of school-aged children are often summoned to a child's room at night by their cries of pain. The parents rush into the room, flip on the lights and find their child rubbing his legs in discomfort. After massaging his legs and giving him a hug for reassurance, the ache subsides. The child returns to sleep and feels fine in the morning. This phenomenon is known as "growing pains" and occurs in 4 to 15 percent of school-aged children.

Symptoms
Dr. Catharine Shaner, pediatrician and pediatric advisor to the American Safety & Health Institute (ASHI), explains that growing pains are the most common cause of recurrent limb pain in children. There are several typical characteristics that parents can look for to determine whether or not their child has growing pains.

  • The pains wake the child from sleep.
  • The pains occur at the end of the day.
  • The pains are deep and achy.
  • The pain resembles a restless feeling in the legs.
  • The pains are often in the front of the thighs or the back of the calf.
  • The pain occurs in both legs, not just one.
  • The pain lasts one to 15 minutes.

Although the child may experience the pains for two or more years, the pains are intermittent and do not generally occur every night for that entire time period.

Dr. Shaner often hears from parents: "Doctor, I had pains like this when I was a child and they went away. Could this be growing pains?" When a child experiences growing pains, usually one or both of the parents experienced them as children. "Few of my patients were surprised by a diagnosis of growing pains, because one or both parents had experienced the same in childhood," Dr. Shaner says. "Pain syndromes in general tend to be familial. For example, families with growing pains may also have members with chronic headaches, recurrent abdominal pains, fibromyalgia and the like."

What Causes Growing Pains?
Although there is little known about growing pains, they often occur during early childhood and through the elementary years. Many children experience moderate discomfort, but for some children the pain is severe.

Typically growing pains occur at night while a child is off his feet and lying in bed. Strenuous activities throughout the day often contribute to these painful leg cramps at night. Even though there are countless children who suffer from leg pains, many physicians believe there's little connection between these pains and growth spurts except that they usually occur during a period of rapid growth.

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