Costochondritis - Tietze's syndrome

Low urgency
--

Inflammation of the cartilage that joins the ribs with the sternum. It mainly affects the second and third ribs. It is most common in people in their 20s to 40s but, it can appear at any age.

The cause is unknown, although it may be associated with colds, intense cough, stress, alcohol, intense physical exercise, a thorax trauma, a viral infection or maintaining bad posture.

Its manifestations are severe, stabbing chest pain that increases when touching the area. It is rare from happening but, it sometimes can spread to the back and the arms.

Diagnosis is reached clinically through questioning and a physical examination.

The treatment's objective is relieving the pain with common analgesics.

Bibliographic references
  1. Christopher M Wise. Major causes of musculoskeletal chest pain in adults. UpToDate. Oct 17, 2015.
  2. Christopher M Wise. Clinical evaluation of musculoskeletal chest pain. UpToDate. nov 16, 2015.
  3. Tietze, A. Uber eine eigneartige Haufund von Fallen mit Dystrophie der Rippenknorpel. Berlin Klin Wschr 1921; 58:829.
  4. Aeschlimann A, Kahn MF. Tietze's syndrome: a critical review. Clin Exp Rheumatol 1990; 8:407.
  5. Bösner S, Becker A, Hani MA, et al. Chest wall syndrome in primary care patients with chest pain: presentation, associated features and diagnosis. Fam Pract 2010; 27:363.
Author
Dr. Sara Vitoria
Copyright
© TeckelMedical 2026

Symptoms

    Pain when pressing the area between the sternum and the ribs


    Intense and intermittent chest pain


    Chest pain radiates towards the back


    Chest pain increases when you breathe deeply


    Chest pain

Symptoms to watch out for

Difficulty breathing
A feeling of shortness of breath
Fever (temperature higher than 38 ºC)
Cough alongside blood or pus

Self-care

Consume over-the-counter pain relievers or anti-inflammatories.
Relative rest, rest until symptoms subside.
Apply warm compresses 3 to 4 times a day for 10 to 15 minutes.