Looking to diagnose and treat a minor health issue at home? If so, it’s important to have access to straightforward, factual medical information. Mayo Clinic Guide to Home Remedies provides clear descriptions and advice from Mayo Clinic experts on 130 different health conditions that can often be treated, at least in part, at home. The following excerpt on cramps and charley horses is an example where you learn the cause of the condition, prevention tips, and potential treatment advice. While a book can’t always replace seeing a medical professional, Mayo Clinic Guide to Home Remedies can help you get on the road to healing, and possibly prevent a trip to the doctor.
A cramp, sometimes called a charley horse, is actually a muscle spasm — a sudden, involuntary contraction of one or more muscles into a painful knot. Overuse or strain of a muscle, dehydration, or simply holding a single position for a prolonged period may result in a muscle cramp.
Almost everyone gets a cramp at some point in the course of day-to-day activities. For example, people who become fatigued and dehydrated while participating in sports in warm weather often complain of muscle cramps.
Writer’s cramp, affecting the thumb and first two fingers of your writing hand, results from using the same muscles to grip a pen or pencil for long periods. At home, you can develop cramps in your hand or arm after spending long hours using a paintbrush or garden tool.
A common type of cramp — nocturnal cramps — occurs in your calf muscles or toes during sleep. The cause of this type of cramp is unknown but frequency seems to increase with age.
Home Remedies
If you have a muscle cramp, these actions may provide relief:
• Gently stretch and massage a cramping muscle.
• For lower leg (calf) cramps, put your weight on the leg and bend your knee slightly. Or, bring your toes upward and hold them. Don’t point your toes downward.
• For upper leg (hamstring) cramps, straighten your legs and lean forward at your waist. Steady yourself with a chair.
• Apply heat to relax tense, tight muscles.
• Apply cold to sore or tender muscles.
• Drink water. Fluid helps your muscles to function normally.
Prevention
To prevent muscle cramps:
• Stretch your leg muscles daily, using the stretches for the Achilles tendon and calf.
• Stretch your muscles carefully and gradually warm up before participating in vigorous activity.
• Stop exercising as soon as a cramp begins.
• Drink plenty of liquids every day. Fluids help your muscles contract and relax and keep muscle cells hydrated and less irritable. Drink fluids before any exercise activity.
Medical Help
Muscle cramps usually disappear on their own and are rarely serious enough to require medical care. However, if you experience frequent and severe muscle cramps or if your cramps disturb your sleep, see a healthcare professional.
Most muscle cramps are harmless, but some might be related to a medical concern, such as reduced blood flow from narrowed arteries, nerve compression or not enough minerals. Medication prescribed for high blood pressure can cause increased urination, which can drain the body of minerals such as potassium, calcium or magnesium.
Excerpted from Mayo Clinic Guide to Home Remedies by Cindy A. Kermott, M.D., M.P.H. and Gail M. Boriel, M.B.B.S., M.P.H.
Relevant reading
The New Rules of Menopause
The ultimate guide, offering real talk about menopause, straight, honest info for managing symptoms and the keys to optimizing your health for the long run – from one of the top doctors in the field of women's health and other experts from Mayo Clinic.