Shin Splints (MTSS): Running Mistakes That Cause It

Most cases of medial tibial stress syndrome are not bad luck. They follow a small set of predictable training and behavioural patterns that the published literature has identified with reasonable confidence. The 2017 systematic review by Newman and Andersen in Sports Medicine documented several modifiable risk factors. The 2019 BJSM consensus on lower-limb stress injuries reinforced them. The mistakes below are the ones that produce most MTSS presentations among Indian runners between July and February — the build phase for the main race calendar. Identifying which mistake you are making is the first step in not repeating it.

Mistake one: the volume spike

Adding mileage faster than the body can adapt is the most consistent cause of MTSS in published cohort studies. The 2014 study by Nielsen in the International Journal of Sports Physical Therapy demonstrated elevated injury risk in runners increasing weekly mileage by more than 30% over a two-week window. The mechanism is straightforward: tibial bone remodelling lags behind the loading stimulus, and cumulative microdamage produces periosteal irritation.

In practice, this mistake takes a recognisable form. A runner signs up for a target race three months out, panics about being behind, and adds 8 km to their weekly volume in week one of their build. Symptoms appear in week three or four. The remedy was a 4 to 5 km weekly increase, applied earlier.

What the 10% rule actually means

The often-cited 10% rule limits weekly mileage increases to approximately 10% of the prior week. The evidence for this exact figure is mixed, but the principle — progressive overload bounded by tissue adaptation rates — is well supported. The 10% rule is a heuristic, not a law. Some weeks tolerate less, particularly when intensity or hills are added. Some weeks tolerate more, particularly during low-load base phases.

Mistake two: stacking intensity changes

Adding intensity, hills, and volume in the same week multiplies stress on the tibia. The 2016 review by Mucha in Journal of Athletic Training identified that combined training stressors produce non-linear injury risk increases. The implication: change one variable at a time during build phases.

The common pattern is the runner who returns from a few weeks off, adds back base volume, and simultaneously reintroduces speed work and hill repeats. Each variable in isolation might have been manageable. Combined, they exceed adaptive capacity. Symptoms appear within 2 to 4 weeks. The fix is sequencing: rebuild easy mileage first, add long runs second, reintroduce speed and hill work last, with at least 2 weeks of adaptation between each addition.

The build-phase order that the literature supports

For runners building toward a target race, the published consensus suggests an order: easy aerobic base first, long run progression second, tempo and threshold work third, speed and hills last. Each phase typically lasts 3 to 4 weeks before the next addition. The total build is usually 12 to 16 weeks for a half marathon and 16 to 20 weeks for a marathon.

Mistake three: ignoring strength work

Calf and hip weakness is a documented MTSS risk factor across multiple published studies. The 2018 trial by Sale showed that runners with single-leg calf raise capacity below 25 repetitions had higher tibial strain during gait analysis. The 2016 Mucha review documented elevated MTSS risk in runners with weaker hip abduction. Despite this, most recreational runners report inconsistent or absent strength work, particularly during high-volume build phases when the strength work would matter most.

The pattern: runners drop strength when running volume increases, on the logic that they cannot recover from both. The data suggests this trade-off is misjudged. Two strength sessions per week of 20 to 30 minutes — calf, hip, and single-leg work — does not exceed recovery capacity, and substantially reduces injury risk. The exercise progression is documented in the exercises library, with the structured progression for MTSS-prone runners available at shin splints.

What strength dose actually looks like

The minimum effective dose for MTSS prevention is two strength sessions weekly. Each session includes calf raises (straight-knee and bent-knee, 3 sets of 12 progressing to weighted), hip strength (side-lying leg raises, lateral band walks, single-leg glute bridges, 3 sets of 12), and single-leg balance or stability work. The sessions take 25 to 35 minutes and require no gym equipment.

Mistake four: surface monotony

Running every session on the same hard surface increases cumulative tissue load and reduces adaptation variety. Urban Indian runners face structural limits here. Soft surfaces are uncommon in most cities. Pavement, treadmill, and concrete tracks dominate. The 2015 systematic review in Sports Medicine identified abrupt surface changes — not surface hardness alone — as a risk factor.

The practical adjustment is variety where possible. Substituting one weekly session on grass, packed earth, or trail reduces cumulative loading patterns. Where geography prevents this, rotating between firmer and more cushioned shoe models provides a partial substitute. Treadmill use during monsoon, while sometimes necessary, should not exceed 40 to 50% of total weekly volume during build phases.

India-specific surface management

Cities differ in their available surfaces. Mumbai runners have access to Marine Drive's pavement but few soft surfaces. Bengaluru runners have park loops with some packed earth at Cubbon Park and Lalbagh. Delhi runners have the Lodhi Gardens loop and Aravalli Biodiversity Park. Pune runners have hill access through SGS Road. Identifying the soft-surface options in your city, even if they require a short commute, supports varied loading.

Mistake five: ignoring early symptoms

The MTSS continuum runs from mild periosteal irritation through stress reaction to stress fracture. Each stage takes longer to recover than the previous. The 2019 BJSM consensus on bone stress injuries emphasised the value of early intervention: stress reactions respond to 2 to 4 weeks of modified training, while stress fractures require 6 to 12 weeks of cessation.

The common pattern is the runner who experiences mild shin discomfort, ignores it because it eases after warm-up, and continues full training until pain becomes intolerable. By that point the injury has progressed. The remedy is to act on early symptoms — pain during the first 5 minutes of running, palpable tenderness across the medial tibial border — with immediate load reduction and structured strength work.

Distinguishing manageable from serious

Mild MTSS symptoms — pain only during running, resolving within minutes of stopping, no palpable tenderness, no pain during walking — usually respond to a 30 to 50% volume reduction over 2 to 4 weeks. Persistent symptoms (pain during walking, palpable tenderness across more than 5 cm, pain at night) warrant clinical assessment and likely imaging to rule out stress fracture. The recovery guide covers the broader response framework, and the injuries index documents the wider category.

What to do differently next build

The mistakes above are corrigible. Plan your build phase 12 to 20 weeks ahead of the target race. Increase volume by 10% per week with one cut-back week every fourth week. Sequence intensity additions rather than stacking them. Maintain two strength sessions per week throughout the build. Vary surfaces deliberately where geography permits. Respond to early symptoms with structured load reduction, not denial.

The STRIDD plan generator builds load curves that respect these principles, with strength integration and recovery sequencing built in. For broader reading on overuse injuries and training science, the Running Lab hub aggregates related guides. The data are clear that the prevention work costs less time than the rehabilitation work. Most runners learn this twice. Some learn it once.

Frequently asked questions

What is the single biggest cause of shin splints in runners?

Rapid volume increases relative to tissue adaptation capacity. The published evidence consistently identifies abrupt mileage spikes as the most common precipitant. The 2014 Nielsen study and multiple subsequent reviews show elevated injury risk when weekly mileage increases by more than 30% over a two-week window. The remedy is patient build phases of 12 to 20 weeks for major race targets.

Can I get shin splints from running too slowly?

Pace itself is not a primary driver of MTSS. Most cases arise from total cumulative load relative to capacity, not from running speed in isolation. That said, very slow over-striding can increase per-stride tibial loading. Runners with a low cadence (under 165 steps per minute on easy runs) may benefit from modest cadence increases combined with adequate strength capacity.

How important is shoe rotation for preventing shin splints?

Rotating between two or three different shoe models provides some protective effect by varying loading patterns across sessions. The evidence is moderate rather than strong. The 2013 study by Malisoux in the Scandinavian Journal of Medicine & Science in Sports reported lower injury rates in runners using multiple shoes. Rotation is a useful adjunct, not a substitute for the larger principles of load management and strength work.

Are treadmills bad for shin splints?

Treadmills are not inherently problematic, but exclusive treadmill use limits surface variety and can foster predictable loading patterns that contribute to cumulative stress. Using a treadmill for 40 to 50% of weekly volume during monsoon or extreme weather is reasonable. Beyond that, the lack of surface and terrain variation becomes a risk factor. Vary cadence and incline to introduce some stimulus diversity.

Should I rest completely if I get shin splints?

Complete rest is rarely necessary or optimal. A 30 to 50% volume reduction, maintenance of strength work, and substitution of running with low-impact cardio (cycling, pool running) typically produces better outcomes than full cessation. The 2019 BJSM consensus emphasises relative rest with continued tissue stimulus over complete rest, except in cases that have progressed to stress reaction or fracture.

How long until I can race after recovering from shin splints?

For mild MTSS resolved within 2 to 4 weeks of load reduction, runners can typically rebuild to race fitness within 8 to 12 weeks. For higher-grade cases that have progressed to stress reaction or fracture, the timeline extends to 16 to 24 weeks. The functional criteria for return (pain-free hopping, full-volume training tolerance) matter more than the calendar in determining race readiness.