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The occurrence of growing pains is a forehead, the growth rate of bones in the process of growth and development of children, the speed of muscles and ligaments is relatively slow, the speed is uneven, resulting in muscle and ligament pulling and causing pain, when children grow to puberty, growth pains will disappear naturally, short may be a few months, long may take one to two years, growing pains are normal.
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Growth pains are more common in children aged 3 6 and 8 12 years, especially at 3 6 years old. It should be noted that growing pains will not have any effect on the growth and development of the child. After this age, growing pains will disappear naturally.
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Not sure, some are asymptomatic at the age of seven or eight, and growing pains mostly occur between 2 and 13 years old, mainly manifested as unexplained pain around the knee joint or the front of the calf, but there is no local redness, swelling and tenderness, and the activity is normal. The pain usually occurs around dusk, and can be aggravated by excessive exercise and fatigue, but it relieves itself with rest, and disappears completely the next morning. The reason for this is that the height increases rapidly during this period, and it can grow 7-8 cm taller per year.
Because the bone grows rapidly, the nerves, tendons, and muscles around it grow relatively slowly, resulting in a kind of stretching pain.
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No, it will be fine in a few days, but in early childhood, children have low immunity, weak disease resistance, and are very difficult to manage, you should pay attention to keeping children hygienic, read more books, and learn to master some scientific parenting methods.
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Go to the hospital for a check-up, in short, if it's not normal, there will be a problem.
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It varies from person to person, and each child is different, if the pain is obvious, it is more reliable to go to the hospital to find a doctor.
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It's hard to say, some are very long, some are several bells, and there is no basis.
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After the onset of puberty, when the height is growing by leaps and bounds, he will complain of soreness and discomfort in the lower limbs, take the child to the hospital for examination, blood routine, blood sedimentation rate, anti-"O" test and X-ray joint photography are normal, and the doctor can not find positive signs, and the child's growth and development will not be affected at all. This is commonly referred to as "growing pains" in puberty.
Growing pain is a physiological reflection of a child's most vigorous growth. Some scholars have conducted a sample survey in schools and found that about 4% to 5% of students in the middle and upper grades of primary school will have growing pain. The peak of this pain is around the age of 11.
Girls have a higher rate of growth pain than boys.
Growing pain usually occurs during nighttime sleep (sleep food), and the pain is mainly in the deltoid muscle of the thigh and the gastrocnemius muscle of the calf, and is a non-articular pain. Most of the pain is soreness, but it can also be tingling, burning, and some children with growing pain may also have calf cramps, headaches, abdominal pain and other symptoms.
The cause of growth pain is not well understood, and it is easy to be confused with sports (sports food) fatigue and exercise injury rheumatic lesions. If the pain in the lower extremities is severe, you should go to the hospital for differential diagnosis. For the management of growing pain, local massage with hands for 15 minutes twice a day can be performed to relieve self-conscious symptoms, without the use of medications**.
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"Growing pains" refers to pain around the knee or in the front of the calf, where there is no history of trauma, normal movement, and no redness, swelling, or tenderness in the local tissues. After the examination, the possibility that the child has other diseases is ruled out, i.e. it can be considered "growing pains". The occurrence of growing pains is mostly due to the relatively large amount of activity in children, the rapid growth of long bones, and the growth and development of local muscles and tendons, which leads to the occurrence of physiological pain.
Pathology**. Bones grow rapidly.
Children's bones grow rapidly, while the nerves, tendons, and muscles around the long bones of the limbs grow relatively slowly, resulting in traction pain.
Accumulation of metabolites.
Muscle soreness occurs when overactivity, or too many metabolites in developing tissues, causes a buildup of acidic metabolites.
Inward curvature of the tibia. The tibia of the lower leg is more curved when toddler, and the human body compensates for a certain degree of knee valgus. As the body grows, a small number of young children are not corrected in time, and in order to keep the joints stable, the leg muscles often remain tense and cause pain.
Symptomatic features. Pain in the lower extremities is common.
Growing pains most commonly occur in the front of the knees, calves, and thighs, occasionally in the groin area, and the pain is usually outside the joints. Pain is typically bilateral, but there is also pain on one side.
It is usually muscular pain.
Growing pains are mainly muscle pain, not pain in joints or bones. There will also be no redness, swelling or warmth in the painful area.
Pain is more common at night.
The biggest feature of growing pains is that they almost always occur at night. But don't ignore the daytime. During the day, your child may be less aware of other things because he or she is more active, even if he feels uncomfortable.
At night, when the body and mind are relaxed and ready to rest, the symptoms of "pain" will make the child feel particularly uncomfortable and even unbearable.
Diagnostic methods. There is no evidence that a child's growth is painful. However, movements such as running, climbing, and jumping can put stress on a child's musculoskeletal system. Therefore, excessive activity during the day is the most likely cause of nighttime aches.
Doctors usually diagnose growing pains based on your child's symptoms and the results of a physical examination. Before making a definitive diagnosis, doctors need to rule out other disorders with similar symptoms, such as hyperactive leg syndrome (which is characterized by uncomfortable sensations in the legs, often with involuntary movement of the lower limbs).
Occasionally, the doctor may also do blood tests, X-rays or other diagnostic tests to determine the cause of your child's leg pain.
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Growing pains are the pain caused by the rapid growth of bones, the slow growth of surrounding tissues, nerves, and muscle fibers during the child's growth.
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If you grow too fast, your muscles can't keep up, so you can stretch the pain, exercise moderately, and supplement more protein and calcium.
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Some children will have growing pains in the process of growing up, which generally occurs at night, with symptoms of pain in the legs, and more pain in the joints. So what exactly is growing pain, and what are the main manifestations? Let's take a look at this issue for you, let's take a look!
Growing pains in children mostly occur in children aged 3-12 years with normal growth and development, the main manifestations are intermittent episodes of dull pain in the lower limbs, or pins and needles pain, or even severe stretching pain, the main parts of the appearance are around the knee joint and the front of the calf, generally lasting from a few minutes to a few hours, the pain is accompanied by fever and rash and other symptoms. If there is no trauma, redness, swelling, or tenderness in the area where the pain occurs, it is considered to be caused by growing pains in children if the possibility of other diseases is ruled out by examination.
There are three main manifestations of growing pains:
1. The pain is mostly in the lower limbs.
The most common pain sites for growing pains are in the lower limbs, knees, calves, and thighs, and may also occur in the groin area.
2. The pain is mostly muscular pain.
Although the pain is usually in the joint, it is not joint pain, but muscle pain, and the pain area does not appear to be hot, red and swollen.
3. Pain occurs more at night.
Pain occurs at night is the biggest feature of growing pains, but it is not that there is no pain during the day, but because children are more active during the day, even if they are uncomfortable, they will not be easy to notice because they are focused on other things. At night, when resting, the child's energy will be more focused on the pain, and it will even reach an unbearable level.
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1. Growing pain refers to the pain around the knee joint or the front side of the calf in children, these parts do not have any history of trauma, the activity is normal, and there is no redness, swelling and tenderness in the local tissues. After the examination, the possibility that the child has other diseases is ruled out, i.e. it can be considered "growing pains". It is mainly caused by the rapid growth of children's long bones and the incompatibility with the growth and development of local muscles and tendons.
2. The so-called growing pains are due to the fact that the growth rate of bones is relatively fast and the growth rate of muscles and ligaments is relatively slow during the development of children. It is a normal growth phenomenon that will disappear after a while, so parents don't have to worry too much.
3. The pain area of "growing pain" is not fixed, and pain may occur in all parts of the lower limbs. The calf, thigh, and knee fossa are the three most likely to have growing pains. It occurs mainly in children aged 3 6 and 8 to 12 years.
4. The feeling of growing pain, mainly in the child's knees, ankle joints or calves, numbness, swelling and pain, the degree of which is mild or severe, and some children have pinprick pain, or even severe stretching pain. It usually occurs in the middle of the night, there is no redness and swelling in the legs, there is no pain when the leg muscles are pressed, and there is no shadow of walking without sound.
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So what are growing pains?
Growth pains usually occur in children between the ages of 3 and 12, when the child is at the peak of growth and development. But unfortunately, there is no unified, scientific answer to the cause of growing pains in the scientific and medical community. However, some scholars speculate that it is because some children have a low tolerance for pain, or that the pain is caused by the child's excessive activity during the day.
But not all leg pain is growing pain. SoHow can you tell if it's a growing pain? Generally, you can see if the child's pain is full of the following points:
1.Irregular seizures
Some children do not have any causes other than excessive exercise during the day, and if this pain occurs from time to time, it may be growing pains.
2.I didn't move but it started to hurt
Growing pains generally do not affect the child's activities during the day, and it doesn't matter if the child runs or jumps freely, but it starts to hurt when he rests and does not move at night.
3.It gets better on its own and goes away
Generally, growing pains are pain at night, and they will improve and disappear on their own in a short period of time, and they will heal without treatment, and they will get better again during the day.
If the child has pain after the trauma, and it may even be red and swollen, it is not a growing pain. Of course, if parents are not sure, they should still take their children to the hospital in time to see an orthopedic doctor.
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