Do muscle relaxers make you gain weight? 

Do muscle relaxers make you gain weight? 

Muscle relaxers are not directly associated with weight gain. However, the reduced activity because of your injury may make you gain a few pounds as you may not be able to move enough to burn the extra calories. 

This type of weight gain is not significant, especially if you’re maintaining a good diet. However, if you begin to eat an excessive amount of unhealthy foods like refined carbs, then you may begin to gain a tremendous amount of weight. 

Several studies have suggested that an injury that can affect your daily life activities can be quite depressing. It can trigger episodes of binge eating or stress eating. 

This is, not at all, related to your muscle relaxers. It is related to the changes in your mood and behaviour as your body’s response to an injury that makes you inactive. 

What does research suggest?

There is limited research on the effects of muscle relaxers on body weight. The incidence of weight gain or weight loss while taking muscle relaxers is low and not many cases of weight changes are reported. 

However, some case studies show weight loss, and not weight gain, with the use of some muscle relaxers, like Baclofen (1). Experts believe that an individual’s response to muscle relaxers can cause variations in side effects. 

Patient-specific factors like age, weight, dosage strength, concomitant use of other medications, any underlying health conditions, and overall genetics can make a difference. If we look at basic clinical studies, weight-related side effects are not considered common with muscle relaxers. 

What to do if you think your muscle relaxer is making you gain weight?

If you think your muscle relaxer is making you gain weight, talk to your healthcare provider. Only your doctor can rule the medication out and pinpoint other factors that could be contributing to your weight gain. 

If your medicine is solely responsible for causing weight gain, your doctor may switch you to another muscle relaxer with less potential for weight gain. Meanwhile, you should take good care of yourself. Proper care is essential with the use of muscle relaxers for faster recovery (2).

If your injury has made you bedridden or sedentary, make sure to keep your diet balanced. Eat food that can not only manage your weight but can also help you recover faster. 

Move as much as you can. Stretch those body parts which are not affected by the injury. If you are taking muscle relaxers for a mild injury, make sure you move as much as your injury allows you to. The more you move, the earlier your body will start to recover. 

Was this helpful?

Thanks for your feedback!

References

1.-

Arima H, Oiso Y. Positive effect of baclofen on body weight reduction in obese subjects: a pilot study. Intern Med. 2010;49(19):2043-7. doi: 10.2169/internalmedicine.49.3918. Epub 2010 Oct 1. PMID: 20930428. Available from: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/20930428/

2.-

Witenko C, Moorman-Li R, Motycka C, Duane K, Hincapie-Castillo J, Leonard P, Valaer C. Considerations for the appropriate use of skeletal muscle relaxants for the management of acute low back pain. P T. 2014 Jun;39(6):427-35. PMID: 25050056; PMCID: PMC4103716. Available from: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4103716/