Myalgia

Background

  • Myalgia refers to muscle pain, which may be localized or diffuse[1]
  • 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

  1. Glaubitz S, et al. Myalgia in myositis and myopathies. Best Pract Res Clin Rheumatol. 2019 Jun;33(3):101433. PMID 31590993