Hi C.,
I personally don't buy in to growing pains. Here is why.
An infant grows more during his first year (and even faster during the first 6 months) than he ever will in his whole life. If growing pains were a reality, I would think ALL babies would be screaming of pain for that first year.
Beyond nerve endings being damaged, pain typically comes from inflammation.
My daughter started having knee pain at 5. She would only complain once in a while.I thought she fell on it. It persisted on and off, for a year. My husband and the doc both said growing pains. By 7 it was in the other knee. by 8, it was sometimes in her hip. it moved to the other hip. It moved back and forth, and some days no pain. By 10 in was in her back as well. At 10 she had x rays, bone scans, blood workups, etc. nothing showed up.
She is now 12. She no longer has days with no pain. It is always somewhere. We are still trying to figure out what my daughter has. One doc said she could have Anklyosing Spondilitis, but the test came back negative and went back to the growing pains diagnosis! Another doc said she has low blood pressure - (she recently started blacking out when she stands up.) Another doc tested her for LYME disease. She showed some titers but the test was inconclusive. They started her on antibiotics for lyme. She has shown some improvement of pain level (from a 7 to a 4)however pain is now in front muscles of thighs as well. All of these could be a possibility, as she has symptom overlap of many things. She also has symptoms, that started a couple years ago, of Chronic fatigue Syndrome. CFS has crossover syptoms with lyme, Fibromyalgia, and others.
I do medical research about her and here is what I have come up with so far.
Two things to note with her:
One, she has a unrinary tract infection at 3, that the docs misdiagnosed and it went to her kidneys for a week before they diagnosed it correctly again. She was reinfected several times in the next 2 years, ecoli, Klebsiella, Staph, and kept getting antibiotics. Long story short- she had virulent bacteria that I think eventually ended up in her blood stream.
Two, she was on soy formula as a baby. I have come across much information that points to soy disrupting the endocrine system. I'll talk more about that later.
First, back to bacteria. Bacterial infections can produce arthritic symptoms. They have taken synovial fluid from the knees of people in pain and/or diagnosed with Anklyosing Spodilitis, and found Klebsiella bacteria. The bacteria causes inflammation- leading to pain.
Indeed, lyme infection is caused by a spirochete bacteria, Borrelia Burgdoferi. Knees are the most common joint affected in Lyme. When several children in Lyme, Connecticut started presenting with arthritis in knees, elbows, etc.- they found it was caused by bacteria transferred from a tic bite. Some scientists now claim they have found mosquitos and fleas that are carrying it too, although many other docs, who still tow the AMA line, don't accept those claims. many docs still claim california doesn't have tics that carry lyme, although that has been disproven time and again. If you want more info on diagnosing Lyme and the "THE" lab to go to, contact me.
Bacterias, viruses, heavy metals and poisons can be introduced into the body via vaccinations. There are researchers who have found many nasty things in vaccines. There have been documented cases of people becoming parapalegic, autistic and arthritic after shots.
Getting back to the edocrine system. Soy, due to it being estrogenic, can disrupt the endocrine system and cause hypothyroidism. Hypothyroidism can cause arthritis like symptoms. Soy is in absolutely everything now adays, including ice cream! It can be called soy isolate, soy exract, soy protien, soy lethicin, etc. Chlorine,floride, bromine, parabens in lotions, are all estrogenic as well. Estrogen dominance can trigger abnormal calcium deposits in soft tissue leading to inflammation and arthritis.
Since feeding soy formula is equlvalent to 5 birth control pills a day, it is possible my DD has estrogen dominance. This is my next quest with her doctor- to test her hormone levels.
I think Iodine is very important and I have started giving her supps for that - it is called IDORAL, found online. Iodine saturates the thyroid, keeping it healthy, and Iodine is anti bacterial-viral-protozoa- so it cleans the blood as the blood passes through the thyroid. MOST people now adays are iodine deficient, especially since our food and water contamination kills our iodine stores.
Magnesium deificiency can cause right side pain in legs and calcium deficiency- left side leg pains. bathing in a bath w/ 2 cups epsom salts , 3 x a week, can give the body magnesium. This is easy and inexpensive to try. It also enduces sleep. Magnesium and calcium compete, so have him also drink raw milk too. (organicastures.com)
ps...some bacteria depletes magnesium!
As far as your doc saying it is growing pains- there are tests they can do to point towards inflammation in the body. SED rate is one and surely there are others although probably more expensive. Even a sed rate test can be pricey, depending on your insurance.
Keep looking for answers.
When my daughter is having bad pain, we put castor oil on a square of flannel(saturate it)then put it on the pain area and cover it with a heating pad for a half hour.It works.
Found this idea online.
here is more websites ...
http://www.litalee.com/shopexd.asp?id=132
http://www.nutrimedical.com/news.jhtml?method=view&ne...
http://www.healthy.net/scr/article.asp?ID=539
Kindly,
Gail