Every runner’s fear: could it be a stress fracture?
The scene repeats itself in coaching groups and clinics: the runner feels shin pain, searches the internet, finds \"stress fracture\", and panics. The reality is that the great majority of shin pain in runners is caused by medial tibial stress syndrome (shin splints) and trigger points in the tibialis anterior and posterior — treatable conditions that do not require prolonged time off, much less immobilization.
The key lies in the correct diagnosis. Tibial stress fracture is possible, but presents distinct features: point-like pain, localized to a few centimeters, that persists at rest and progressively worsens. Myofascial shin splints, on the other hand, generate diffuse pain along the medial border of the tíbia, worsen at the start of the run, may relieve with warm-up, and respond very well to dry needling and load management.
How runner's shin generates pain
Repetitive periosteal traction
The tibialis posterior and soleus insert on the posteromedial border of the tíbia. During running, repetitive traction of these insertions on the periosteum generates periosteal microinflammation — the basis of classic shin splints. Sudden increase in volume or intensity of training is the main triggering factor.
Tibialis anterior and anteromedial shin splints
The tibialis anterior, responsible for ankle dorsiflexion, is overloaded in runners with a pronounced heel strike. Trigger points in this muscle refer pain to the anteromedial aspect of the shin and to the dorsum of the foot, frequently confused with periostitis.
Trigger points in the soleus and tibialis posterior
The soleus and tibialis posterior, when with active trigger points, generate referred pain to the medial region of the shin and heel. This referred pain amplifies the perception of periosteal pain and contributes to the sense of "the whole shin hurting" that runners describe.
Biomechanics and perpetuating factors
Excessive foot pronation, tibialis posterior weakness, shortened gastrocnemii, and abrupt mileage increase are perpetuating factors. Without correcting these factors, isolated treatment of pain produces temporary relief with frequent recurrence on returning to running.
Clinical data on shin pain in runners
Recognizing shin splints and their myofascial components
Typical pattern of runner’s shin pain
- 01
Pain along the medial border of the tíbia that appears during or after running
- 02
Diffuse pain over several centimeters of the shin, not point-like
- 03
Pain that worsens at the start of training and may relieve with warm-up
- 04
Recent increase in volume, intensity, or change of training surface
- 05
Tibialis anterior tender and tense on palpation
- 06
Shin pain that improves on rest days
- 07
Sensation of a "heavy" or "stiff" shin in the first kilometers
Myths and facts about shin pain
Myth vs. Fact
Shin pain when running means I need to stop running
Shin splints from medial tibial stress and trigger points rarely require complete time off. Load management — temporarily reducing volume and intensity while treating the cause — allows maintenance of conditioning. Prolonged complete rest can even worsen the picture by loss of bone and muscular adaptation. The sports physician guides safe progression.
Shin splints are a shoe problem — just change the footwear
The shoe is a factor, but rarely the sole cause. Shin splints result from the interaction of training load, biomechanics, muscle strength, and recovery. Changing shoes without correcting training volume or treating leg trigger points produces the same injury with a different shoe.
If shin pain is bilateral, it is probably a stress fracture
Bilateral shin splints are more common than unilateral in runners, precisely because both legs receive the same overload. Simultaneous bilateral stress fracture is rare. Bilaterality actually reinforces the diagnosis of medial tibial stress syndrome and trigger points, not fracture.
The runner who thinks they need to stop
Treatment protocol
Evaluation and exclusion of fracture
1st visitTibial palpation: diffuse pain (shin splints) vs. point-like (suspected fracture). Myofascial examination of the tibialis anterior, soleus, and tibialis posterior. If point-like pain persists at rest, request MRI. Assessment of training load and basic biomechanics.
Dry needling and load management
Sessions 1-3Needling of the tibialis anterior along the muscle belly, seeking twitch response. Dry needling of the soleus and tibialis posterior on the posteromedial border. Electroacupuncture at 2 Hz for periosteal analgesia. Reduction of 30-50% in training volume with maintained frequency.
Strengthening and biomechanical correction
Sessions 4-6Strengthening exercises for the tibialis posterior (standing heel raise with inversion). Stretching of the gastrocnemii and soleus. Assessment of running cadence — a 5-10% increase in cadence reduces tibial impact. Gradual progression of training volume (10% per week rule).
Progressive return and prevention
Sessions 7-8Return to full training load with symptom monitoring. Biweekly maintenance sessions during periods of load increase. Preventive program: calf and tibialis posterior strengthening 2-3x/week. Guidance on training periodization.
Clinical pearl: the single-leg hop test
Frequently asked questions
Frequently Asked Questions
In most cases of shin splints from medial tibial stress, running can be maintained with reduced volume and intensity. Practical rule: if pain does not exceed 3/10 during the run and does not worsen the next day, it is safe to maintain adapted training. The sports physician guides individualized progression. If a stress fracture is suspected, time off is necessary until diagnostic clarification.
The tibialis anterior is a superficial and accessible muscle. Needling generates a twitch response — a visible and brief muscle contraction that most patients describe as a "strong but quick zap". The discomfort is transient and generally much less than the pain during running. There may be local tenderness for 24-48 hours after the session.
For typical shin splints (diffuse pain, bilateral, that improves with rest), clinical and myofascial examination is sufficient to start treatment. MRI is indicated when warning signs are present: point-like pain, pain that progressively worsens with each session, pain at rest, or failure of conservative treatment after 4-6 weeks. The physician evaluates the need on a case-by-case basis.