Growing pains usually refers to the aches and pains that children feel in their legs at night when they are lying in bed. Kids seem to get them during growth spurts, times when they are growing a lot. Doctors think that the tendons the tough elastic straps, or bands, that attach muscles to bones of affected children do not grow quite as fast as their bones do. The tendons eventually catch up, but in the meantime this condition puts muscles under extra stress during an active day and causes them to ache and even spasm (contract abnormally) when they are finally at rest at night. Growing pains are not dangerous. They don’t bother children during the day, and they usually come and go at nighttime. Regular stretching exercises keeping the muscles and tendons relaxed often solve the problem for good. But if the pains are very bad and continue for a long time, a doctor should be seen. In rare cases, an infection, disease, injury, or unnoticed malformation of the legs is causing the problem.
- What’s a charley horse?
- Which states are the biggest farm states?
- Is it easier for my face to laugh or frown?
- Which muscles are the largest, and which ones are the smallest?
- What’s an Achilles heel?
- What are muscles made of?
- Why do my knuckles sometimes make a cracking sound if I bend them?
- How is the body able to bend?
- Is there such a thing as a funny bone?
- Where is my spine?
- Where is my rib cage?
- Which are the biggest and smallest bones?
- How has farming changed in the United States?
- Are bones hard as a rock?
- How do bones grow?
- How many bones are there in the human body?
- How long is a fortnight?
- What do a.m. and p.m. stand for?
- What is a jiffy?
- Who invented the alarm clock?


