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has a very stiff body

What to do if your child has a very stiff body

A child with a very stiff body should be reviewed by a doctor or developmental clinician, with urgent care if stiffness is sudden or comes with fever, arching, breathing trouble or jerking. Persistent or increasing stiffness benefits from gentle handling and a developmental check; physiotherapy and occupational therapy often help. A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre under qualified clinician care.

What to do if your child has a very stiff body
My child's body feels very stiff — what should I do? — Ask Pinnacle, the Child Development Kośa

When a little body feels tight, stiff or hard to move, it's frightening to watch — but knowing what to do next turns worry into action.

In short

If your child's body often feels very stiff — limbs that resist being moved, fists or legs held tightly, arching of the back, or difficulty with relaxed, smooth movement — it's worth having this gently checked by a doctor or developmental clinician. Stiffness (clinicians call increased muscle tone, or hypertonia) can have many causes, and many children respond beautifully to the right support. If stiffness comes on suddenly, with a fever, a stiff neck, an arching body, breathing trouble, unusual jerking, or your child becomes hard to rouse, treat it as a medical emergency and seek urgent care now.

What to do, step by step

  • First, check for urgency. Sudden stiffness with fever, a rigid neck, repeated arching, jerking movements, blue lips or trouble breathing needs immediate medical attention — call your doctor or go to A&E without delay.
  • For long-standing or gradually noticed stiffness, note when you see it — at rest, during nappy changes, when picking your child up, or only when upset. Watch whether it affects one side more than the other, and whether your child also struggles to sit, roll or use their hands.
  • Keep handling gentle and slow. Avoid forcing a stiff limb straight. Warm, calm, unhurried movement, cuddles and supported positions often help a tight body settle.
  • Book a developmental check. A clinician will look at muscle tone, posture, reflexes and milestones together, so the reason for the stiffness — and the right plan — becomes clear. Where appropriate, physiotherapy and occupational therapy help a child move more freely, comfortably and independently.

When to seek a check

Arrange a review if stiffness is persistent, seems to be increasing, affects one side of the body, or comes alongside delays in rolling, sitting, reaching or relaxing the hands. Early, gentle support makes a real difference to comfort and movement — and a clinician can tell ordinary tightness apart from something that benefits from a tailored plan.

The Pinnacle way

This is general information, not a diagnosis — a clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under qualified clinician care, never from an app or online form. From a clinician-administered structured developmental assessment, your child receives a movement plan built around their strengths, supported through our physiotherapy and occupational therapy programmes. You can [start here](/) to find your nearest centre.

Trusted sources

WHO guidance on child health and development; CDC developmental milestones; American Academy of Pediatrics (HealthyChildren.org) on muscle tone and movement concerns; NICE guidance on assessing children with motor difficulties.

Next step — If the stiffness is sudden or severe, seek urgent medical care now; otherwise book a developmental assessment with a Pinnacle clinician for a calm, expert look at your child's movement.

What to watch

Watch whether stiffness is constant or comes only when upset, whether one side is more affected, and whether it appears alongside delays in rolling, sitting, reaching or relaxing the hands. Seek urgent care for sudden stiffness with fever, a rigid or arching body, jerking, breathing trouble or difficulty rousing your child.

Try this at home

Handle a stiff body slowly and gently — warm baths, calm cuddles and supported positions help tight muscles settle; never force a stiff limb straight.

Trusted sources

Developed by SETU Consortium · Pinnacle Blooms Network · Last reviewed 2026-06-10 · reviewed every 365 days

This is general information, not a diagnosis. A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under qualified clinician care.

Frequently asked

Is a stiff body in a child always serious?

Not always. Stiffness can range from mild tightness to increased muscle tone that benefits from support. What matters is whether it is persistent, increasing, one-sided, or paired with movement delays — and whether it appeared suddenly. A developmental check helps tell these apart, and many children respond well to gentle, tailored therapy.

When is a stiff body an emergency?

Seek urgent medical care if stiffness comes on suddenly with fever, a rigid neck, an arching back, repeated jerking, blue lips, breathing difficulty, or if your child becomes hard to wake. These need immediate attention rather than a routine appointment.

Can therapy help a child with a stiff body?

Yes. Once a clinician understands the cause, physiotherapy and occupational therapy use gentle, playful, graded movement to help a child move more freely and comfortably, build independence and reduce discomfort. The plan is always shaped around your child's individual strengths.

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