SaveYourself.ca helps you solve pain problems

muscle pain Thu Nov 12th by Paul Ingraham RMT

Body types and body pain

(This post is a bit fluffy. But I reserve the right to post a bit of fluff now and then! Actually, it’s a great relief! Writing for SaveYourself.ca has been getting kind of heavy lately. I remember the good old days when I wrote about things like just for the sheer fun of it, for the joy of creative shop talk and straightforward public education.)

The idea of body types has minimal clinical importance in the treatment of muscle pain. However, my vague and imprecise professional impression is that lean and skinny folk — ectomorphs — seem more likely to suffer from body pain than the other body types. I have no idea why this might be the case, but it’s been a pretty consistent observation over the years: I have seen many more lean clients with widespread and severe body pain than thickset or muscular people. It’s certainly not that large and muscular people don’t ever have pain, but they do seem to have quite a bit less. Lucky them!

The popular classification of body types into the three “morphs” — ectomorph, endormorph and mesomorph — came from the American psychologist William Herbert Sheldon in the 1940s. Sheldon also associated the body types with personality — that was really the heart of his idea — which has never been considered useful by anyone but Sheldon himself. However, his idea for the naming of body types really stuck, and to this day you hear them tossed around by manual therapists, even though there doesn’t seem to be much point except that we humans like to classify things. The three types are:

  • Ectomorphs are fine-boned and have long, slender muscles and low fat, and are usually called slim, lean or skinny.
  • Mesomorphs have medium bones, low body fat, wide shoulders and well-defined musculature, and is the body type of the hunks of the world.
  • Endomorphs are big-boned and have higher body fat, usually referred to as either fat or heavyset or thickset.

Again, my impression is that ectomorphs are not only cursed with more muscle pain, but also more interesting muscle pain: more variable and unpredictable symptoms, more vivid and complex referred pain. On the other hand, endomorphs seem to be the most immune to muscle pain, and even when they do have it seems to be more stable and predictable, more “straightforward,” with minimal and simpler referred pain.

Mesomorphs seem to be the compromise body type, neither being as immune to muscle pain as the endomorph, nor as prone to it as the ectomorph.

It’s nothing short of wild speculation, but there could be a neurological explanation for these relationships. In extremely oversimplified language, ectoderms may be “nervier” people. The body types are named after the three basic tissue types in embryonic development, and ectoderms are named from the tissue that develops into the skin and nervous system. Just as the dominance of these tissues types affects to appearance of the individual, perhaps it also affects function and sensation.