Running is one of the simplest ways to improve fitness, protect heart health, and support weight control. It is also one of the most common activities I see leading to preventable overuse injuries when people increase training too quickly or ignore early pain.
In my practice, I often see runners in Bangladesh who are committed but underprepared. Some are new to exercise. Some are returning after a long gap. Some are training for a charity run or personal goal. The pattern is usually the same: the body is asked to do more than it has adapted to handle.
This article is general health education, not personal medical advice. If you already have pain, swelling, or an old injury, an in-person orthopedic assessment may be needed.
Why running injuries happen
Most running injuries do not happen from one dramatic event. They build gradually from repeated stress on the knees, shins, ankles, feet, hips, or lower back.
Common reasons include:
- sudden increase in running distance or speed
- weak hip, core, or calf muscles
- poor recovery and inadequate sleep
- old footwear
- hard, uneven, or slippery running surfaces
- dehydration in hot weather
- running through pain instead of adjusting the plan
One important point I want Bangladeshi runners to understand is that the body adapts slowly. Progress that feels slow is often the safest progress.
Start slower than your ambition
I usually explain to my patients that enthusiasm is helpful, but it should not control the first few weeks of training. Beginners often try to run too far, too fast, or too often.
That pattern can lead to:
- shin pain
- knee pain
- calf strain
- Achilles tendon irritation
- ankle overload
A safer rule for beginners
Finish your run with the feeling that you could have done a little more. If every session feels like a test, the load is probably too high.
Warm up before running
A warm-up prepares the muscles and joints for repeated impact. It does not need to be complicated.
Practical warm-up
- 5 to 10 minutes of brisk walking
- ankle circles or ankle mobility work
- gentle leg swings
- light marching or skipping
- easy bodyweight movements if needed
This small step can reduce stiffness and improve control when you start running.
Choose the running surface carefully
In Dhaka and other parts of Bangladesh, surface quality matters a great deal. Broken pavements, potholes, wet ground, and crowded routes increase the chance of awkward loading and sudden strain.
When possible, I advise runners to choose:
- smoother ground
- predictable routes
- safer times of day with less traffic and heat
If the only available route is uneven, shorten the session and keep the pace easy. A slightly shorter run on a safer surface is usually better than forcing distance on a bad one.
Wear shoes that suit your feet and training
Footwear matters, but shoes are not a magic solution. A good running shoe should feel stable, comfortable, and appropriate for the runner’s foot shape and training type.
What I tell runners about shoes
- very old shoes may lose support
- expensive shoes are not automatically better
- the wrong shoe can aggravate discomfort
- shoes must support training, not replace it
If pain is recurring, shoe choice may be part of the problem, but I do not stop there. I also look at training load, strength, movement pattern, and previous injuries.
Build strength, not only endurance
Running is not only a cardiovascular exercise. It is also a repeated single-leg loading activity. That means weak muscles and poor control can quickly show up as pain.
Muscles that matter most
- gluteal muscles
- quadriceps
- calves
- hamstrings
- core muscles
- foot and ankle stabilizers
Even two short strength sessions per week can improve running tolerance. In my orthopedic practice, I often find that stronger hips and calves help reduce the strain on the knees and lower legs.
Increase training gradually
Do not increase distance, speed, and frequency all at the same time. That is one of the most common reasons runners develop overuse pain.
Safer progression
- add distance slowly while keeping pace easy
- or add one extra session while keeping the total workload reasonable
- or introduce speed work only after a stable running base is built
Avoid this pattern
- a long run on Sunday
- a harder run on Monday
- another fast session on Tuesday
That kind of stacking often leads to tendon irritation, shin pain, or knee pain before the runner notices what changed.
Respect pain early
Mild muscle soreness after exercise can be normal. Sharp pain, swelling, limping, or pain that keeps returning is different.
I usually tell patients to take pain seriously when it:
- becomes worse during the run
- changes running form
- causes limping
- lasts longer than expected
- returns every time they train
Training through clear warning signs often turns a short problem into a longer one.
Recover properly
Recovery is not laziness. It is part of training.
Important recovery habits include:
- enough sleep
- adequate hydration
- rest or easy days between harder sessions
- sensible nutrition
- attention to heat and humidity
In Bangladesh, hydration deserves special attention. Warm weather and humidity can make fatigue arrive earlier and can increase the strain on muscles and tendons.
Watch for the real source of pain
When I assess runners, I do not look only at the painful spot. A pain in one area may reflect a problem elsewhere.
For example:
