The VerdictMODERATE CONVICTION

A pulled calf is two different muscles, and one of them can be a blood clot in disguise.

Do a calf raise with your knee straight, then again with your knee bent. Worse with the knee straight points to the surface muscle (gastrocnemius). Worse with the knee bent points to the deep one (soleus). That one test changes how you load it back.

  1. What this actually is: your calf is two muscles, the explosive gastrocnemius and the endurance soleus, and which one tore changes everything.
  2. What most people get wrong: they return to running on a date instead of on what they can actually do, and the calf re-tears.
  3. Start here: rule out a clot, work out which muscle it is, then load it back step by step.

Your calf is two ropes pulling the same anchor. The thick surface rope (gastrocnemius) snaps suddenly when you launch off it, the thin deep rope (soleus) frays slowly under long, steady pulling. They heal at different speeds, so treating both the same is why people re-tear. And a swollen, sore calf with no snap can be a blocked pipe (a clot), not a torn rope at all.

SH
Dr. Seth Holbrook, DPT — Doctor of Physical Therapy • Coach to 300+ clients
I built The Verdict to cut through recycled health advice and show what the evidence actually supports.

Lower Leg · Triceps Surae

Calf Strain

Gastrocnemius vs soleus. A "pulled calf" is really two different injuries, and telling them apart is what gets you back to running without re-tearing.

Conviction: Moderate

What Works

Progressive calf loading

The honest headline: the specific evidence for calf-strain rehab is thin, but the direction is clear. Load the muscle back up progressively, start early, and return to running on ability rather than the calendar.

Progressive loading, including heavy and slow calf raises MODERATE-HIGH

This is the actual treatment, not an add-on. Work both knee positions because they load different muscles.

Exercise Prescription: Seated (knee-bent) and standing (knee-straight) calf raises, 3 sets of 10 to 15, slow lowering, daily as tolerated. Progress to single-leg, then add load toward heavy and slow. Mild ache that settles within a day is fine, sharp pain is not.

Start loading early, do not rest for weeks MODERATE-HIGH

Early controlled loading is linked to a faster return than parking it in rest. Early loading is not the same as early hard stretching.

Exercise Prescription: Within the first days, gentle pain-free ankle movement and easy double-leg calf raises inside comfort. Build load and range as pain allows.
See the rest of the hierarchy (Moderate and Emerging)

Reintroduce running gradually MODERATE

Spiking your training load on return is a setup for re-injury. Use a graded run-walk and build volume slowly.

Eat enough protein during recovery MODERATE

Injured muscle loses volume during rehab. Adequate protein supports rebuilding it.

Symptom relief: relative rest, ice or light compression, a temporary heel lift LOW

Useful for comfort. Just do not expect them to speed up the actual healing.

Adjuncts: blood flow restriction, deep-water running, PRP, others LOW

Plausible and used elsewhere, but unproven specifically for calf strain.

What Doesn't Work

  • Relying on immediate tight compression to speed healing. The trial that tested it found no benefit.
  • Returning to running on a fixed date instead of on what you can do.
  • Aggressive early stretching of a fresh tear. That can extend it.
  • Blaming your height, weight, sex, or dominant side. The research found those are not the risk factors. Age and a previous calf injury are.

Return to Training

Use criteria, not a calendar. Tick these off before you run hard again, and remember the re-injury risk stays raised for about 15 weeks after you get back.

Red Flags — Get Checked First

  • Swollen, warm calf with no clear injury, especially with clot risk factors (recent surgery, long immobility or travel, cancer, a previous clot). This can be a deep vein thrombosis. Do not stretch or massage it, get it assessed urgently. If you also have chest pain or breathlessness, treat it as an emergency.
  • An audible snap with a gap in the muscle and you can barely push off your toes. This can be an Achilles tendon rupture, which needs an orthopaedic assessment.
  • Severe pain out of proportion, a tense swollen calf, and pins and needles. This can be a compartment syndrome and is urgent.

Refer to: A&E or urgent imaging for a suspected clot or compartment syndrome. Orthopaedics for a suspected Achilles or complete muscle rupture.

Do a calf raise with your knee straight, then again with your knee bent. Worse with the knee straight points to the surface muscle. Worse with the knee bent points to the deep one.

That single test tells you which calf muscle you injured, which changes how you load it back and how long it tends to take.

Takes less than 2 minutes. No equipment needed. If your calf is swollen and warm with no clear injury, skip the test and get checked for a clot first.

Conviction

Moderate

The epidemiology is strong: age and prior injury are the dominant risk factors, recurrence risk stays raised for about 15 weeks, and load spikes drive injury. The how-to-rehab layer is a sensible consensus built largely from mixed-muscle strain trials, with no calf-specific dosing and no validated return-to-run test.

What would change this: a large randomized trial in recreational and masters runners comparing criteria-based vs calendar-based return to running, with re-injury at 12 months as the primary outcome, plus a validated return-to-run test battery.

Per-claim: the gastrocnemius vs soleus distinction

Held at moderate-to-high on clinical and anatomical grounds. A trial showing the two muscles need genuinely different rehab timelines, not just different loading emphasis, would firm this up.

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