Myalgia

Revisión del 09:37 22 mar 2026 de Danbot (discusión | contribs.) (Strip excess bold)

Background

  • Myalgia refers to muscle pain, which may be localized or diffuse
  • Extremely common complaint — most cases are benign (viral illness, overexertion, medication side effect)
  • Key EM concern: differentiate benign myalgia from rhabdomyolysis, myositis, and necrotizing fasciitis
  • Diffuse myalgias may indicate systemic disease (viral infection, autoimmune, endocrine, toxicologic)
  • Statin-induced myopathy is one of the most common medication-related causes

Clinical Features

History

  • Localized vs. diffuse
  • Onset: acute (trauma, overexertion, infection) vs. chronic (fibromyalgia, hypothyroidism, statin use)
  • Recent exercise or immobility (rhabdomyolysis)
  • Recent illness (viral myalgia)
  • Medications: statins, fibrates, colchicine, zidovudine, corticosteroids (chronic)
  • Drug/toxin exposure: alcohol, cocaine, amphetamines (rhabdomyolysis)
  • Weakness (true weakness suggests myositis or myopathy vs. pain-limited weakness)
  • Dark urine (myoglobinuria from rhabdomyolysis)
  • Fever, rash, arthralgias (systemic inflammatory/infectious process)
  • Weight changes, fatigue, cold intolerance (hypothyroidism)

Physical Exam

  • Localized tenderness, swelling, induration
  • Muscle strength testing (distinguish weakness from pain)
  • Skin: rash (dermatomyositis — heliotrope rash, Gottron papules), erythema, crepitus (necrotizing fasciitis)
  • Compartment assessment if concern for compartment syndrome (tense compartment, pain with passive stretch)
  • Joint exam (distinguish articular from muscular pain)
  • Thyroid exam

Red Flags

  • Dark (tea/cola-colored) urine → rhabdomyolysis
  • Severe localized pain + swelling + fever → necrotizing fasciitis or deep abscess
  • Progressive proximal weakness → inflammatory myositis (dermatomyositis, polymyositis)
  • Diffuse myalgias + fever + rash → consider toxic shock syndrome, viral hemorrhagic fever, vasculitis
  • Pain out of proportion to exam + crepitus → necrotizing soft tissue infection

Differential Diagnosis

Myalgia

Localized

Diffuse

Evaluation

When Workup is Needed

  • Diffuse myalgias with red flags (dark urine, weakness, fever)
  • Localized myalgias with signs of infection or compartment syndrome
  • Mild myalgias from viral illness or overexertion typically need no workup

Laboratory

  • CK (creatine kinase): key test — markedly elevated in rhabdomyolysis (>5x normal), moderately elevated in myositis
  • BMP: renal function (rhabdomyolysis can cause AKI), potassium, calcium, phosphate
  • Urinalysis: positive for blood on dipstick with no RBCs on microscopy = myoglobinuria
  • CBC: infection, leukemia
  • TSH if chronic or unexplained myalgias
  • LFTs, aldolase if inflammatory myopathy suspected
  • ESR/CRP if inflammatory process suspected
  • Toxicology screen if drug-related rhabdomyolysis suspected

Imaging

  • Not routinely needed for diffuse myalgia
  • CT or MRI if abscess, deep space infection, or compartment syndrome suspected
  • X-ray if stress fracture or bony pathology considered

Management

General

  • Analgesics: NSAIDs, acetaminophen
  • Rest, ice for localized strains
  • Discontinue offending medication if drug-induced (statins — discuss with PCP)

Rhabdomyolysis

  • Aggressive IV fluid resuscitation (NS at 200-300 mL/hr initially)
  • Monitor CK, electrolytes, renal function serially
  • Correct electrolyte abnormalities (especially hyperkalemia, hypocalcemia)
  • See Rhabdomyolysis for detailed management

Myositis/Inflammatory

  • Rheumatology consultation
  • May require corticosteroids or immunosuppressive therapy

Disposition

Admit

  • Rhabdomyolysis with CK >5,000 or renal impairment
  • Necrotizing fasciitis or deep space infection
  • Compartment syndrome
  • Severe electrolyte derangements
  • Inflammatory myopathy with respiratory muscle weakness

Discharge

  • Viral myalgias with normal labs
  • Mild statin myopathy (coordinate medication change with PCP)
  • Muscle strain with pain control
  • Return precautions: dark urine, severe worsening pain, weakness, fever, decreased urine output

See Also

External Links

References