When to see a doctor

By Mayo Clinic Staff

Muscle pain from minor injuries, mild illness, stress or exercise is usually helped with care at home. Muscle pain from severe injuries or health conditions is often serious and requires medical care.

Get medical care right away or go to the emergency room if you have muscle pain with:

  • Trouble breathing or dizziness.
  • Extreme muscle weakness with problems doing routine daily activities.
  • A high fever and stiff neck.
  • A severe injury that keeps you from moving, especially if you have bleeding or other injuries.

Make an appointment with your health care provider if you have:

  • A known tick bite or could have had a tick bite.
  • A rash, especially the “bulls-eye” rash of Lyme disease.
  • Muscle pain, especially in your calves, that occurs with exercise and goes away with rest.
  • Signs of infection, such as redness and swelling, around a sore muscle.
  • Muscle pain after you start taking or increase the dose of a medicine — especially statins, which are medicines used to control cholesterol.
  • Muscle pain that doesn't improve with care at home.

Self-care

Muscle pain that occurs during an activity usually signals a "pulled" or strained muscle. These types of injuries usually respond well to R.I.C.E. therapy:

  • Rest. Take a break from your usual activities. Then begin mild use and stretching as recommended by your health care provider.
  • Ice. Place an ice pack or bag of frozen peas on the sore area for 20 minutes three times a day. 
  • Compression. Use a stretchable bandage, sleeve or wrap to lessen swelling and provide support.
  • Elevation. Raise the injured area above the level of your heart, especially at night, which allows gravity to help lessen swelling.

Try pain relievers you can buy without a prescription. Products you put on your skin, such as creams, patches and gels, may help. Some examples are products that include menthol, lidocaine or diclofenac sodium (Voltaren Arthritis Pain). You also can try oral pain relievers such as acetaminophen (Tylenol, others), ibuprofen (Advil, Motrin IB, others) or naproxen sodium (Aleve).

From Mayo Clinic to your inbox

Sign up for free and stay up to date on research advancements, health tips, current health topics, and expertise on managing health. Click here for an email preview.

We use the data you provide to deliver you the content you requested. To provide you with the most relevant and helpful information, we may combine your email and website data with other information we have about you. If you are a Mayo Clinic patient, we will only use your protected health information as outlined in our Notice of Privacy Practices. You may opt out of email communications at any time by clicking on the unsubscribe link in the email.

April 27, 2023

See also

  1. Addison's disease
  2. Adenocarcinoma: How this type of cancer affects prognosis
  3. Adjuvant therapy: Treatment to keep cancer from returning
  4. Adrenal fatigue: What causes it?
  5. Adult Still disease
  6. Antidepressants: Another tool against chronic pain
  7. Anxiety and diet
  8. Atypical cells: Are they cancer?
  9. Back pain
  10. Back surgery: When is it a good idea?
  11. Biopsy: Types of biopsy procedures used to diagnose cancer
  12. Bird flu (avian influenza)
  13. Brucellosis
  14. Cancer
  15. Cancer blood tests: Lab tests used in cancer diagnosis
  16. Cancer causes: Popular myths about the causes of cancer
  17. Cancer diagnosis: 11 tips for coping
  18. Cancer fatigue: Why it occurs and how to cope
  19. Cancer pain: Relief is possible
  20. Cancer risk: What the numbers mean
  21. Cancer surgery: Physically removing cancer
  22. Cancer survival rate: What it means for your prognosis
  23. Cancer survivors: Care for your body after treatment
  24. Cancer survivors: Late effects of cancer treatment
  25. Cancer survivors: Managing your emotions after cancer treatment
  26. Celiac disease
  27. Chemotherapy side effects: A cause of heart disease?
  28. Chronic pain: Medication decisions
  29. Claudication
  30. Coconut oil: Can it cure hypothyroidism?
  31. Cold and flu viruses: How long can they live outside the body?
  32. Cold sore
  33. Curcumin: Can it slow cancer growth?
  34. Dengue fever
  35. Dermatomyositis
  36. Diarrhea: Cancer-related causes and how to cope
  37. Drinking after hepatitis C cure: Is it safe?
  38. Early HIV symptoms: What are they?
  39. Eating during cancer treatment: Tips to make food tastier
  40. Ehlers-Danlos syndrome
  41. Ehrlichiosis and anaplasmosis
  42. Encephalitis
  43. Endocarditis
  44. Fertility preservation: Understand your options before cancer treatment
  45. Flu shot: Your best bet for avoiding influenza
  46. Flu: When to see a doctor?
  47. Generalized anxiety disorder
  48. Genital herpes
  49. Genital herpes: Can you get it from a toilet seat?
  50. Hangovers
  51. Hantavirus pulmonary syndrome
  52. Heart cancer: Is there such a thing?
  53. Hemophilia
  54. Hepatitis A
  55. Hepatitis C
  56. Hepatitis C: How common is sexual transmission?
  57. Hepatitis C: What happens in end-stage liver disease?
  58. Herbal treatment for anxiety: Is it effective?
  59. High-dose flu vaccines: How are they different from other flu vaccines?
  60. High-dose vitamin C: Can it kill cancer cells?
  61. Histoplasmosis
  62. HIV/AIDS
  63. How cancer spreads
  64. Hypercalcemia
  65. Hypoparathyroidism
  66. Hypothyroidism (underactive thyroid)
  67. Hypothyroidism and joint pain?
  68. Hypothyroidism diet
  69. Hypothyroidism symptoms: Can hypothyroidism cause eye problems?
  70. Hypothyroidism: Can calcium supplements interfere with treatment?
  71. Hypothyroidism: Should I take iodine supplements?
  72. Influenza (flu)
  73. Infographic: Cancer Clinical Trials Offer Many Benefits
  74. Integrative approaches to treating pain
  75. Jet lag disorder
  76. Legionnaires' disease
  77. Listeria infection
  78. Livedo reticularis: When is it a concern?
  79. Low blood cell counts: Side effects of cancer treatment
  80. Mayo Clinic Minute: Signs and symptoms of syphilis
  81. Mayo Clinic Minute: Why getting vaccinated for the flu is doubly important this season
  82. Mixed connective tissue disease
  83. Mort Crim and Cancer
  84. Muscle cramp
  85. Muscle strains
  86. Myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome (ME/CFS)
  87. Myofascial pain syndrome
  88. Myofascial release therapy: Can it relieve back pain?
  89. New Hep C Treatment
  90. No appetite? How to get nutrition during cancer treatment
  91. Nutrition and pain
  92. Pain rehabilitation
  93. Peripheral artery disease (PAD)
  94. Petroleum jelly: Safe for a dry nose?
  95. PICC line placement
  96. Plague
  97. Pneumonia
  98. Polio
  99. Porphyria
  100. Post-polio syndrome
  101. Premenstrual dysphoric disorder
  102. Premenstrual syndrome (PMS)
  103. Pulmonary fibrosis
  104. Salmonella infection
  105. Salt craving: A symptom of Addison's disease?
  106. Self-care approaches to treating pain
  107. Self-Image During Cancer
  108. Severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS)
  109. Sleeping positions that reduce back pain
  110. Small cell, large cell cancer: What this means
  111. Soy: Does it worsen hypothyroidism?
  112. Staph infections
  113. Still's Disease
  114. Syphilis
  115. Tailbone pain
  116. Takayasu's arteritis
  117. Test anxiety: Can it be treated?
  118. Toxic shock syndrome
  119. Trichinosis
  120. Tumor vs. cyst: What's the difference?
  121. Vasculitis
  122. Video: 3 things you didn't know about cold sores
  123. Viral hemorrhagic fevers
  124. Walking pneumonia
  125. When cancer returns: How to cope with cancer recurrence
  126. Why isn't there a hepatitis C vaccine?