Dr. Ketan M. Desai, M.S. (Surg.), D.N.B. (Surg.), M.Ch. (Urology), Consultant Urologist & Laser Specialist, Hon. Urologist: Sir H. N. Reliance Foundation Hospital. Jaslok Hospital, Saifee Hospital, Bhatia General Hospital, Wockhardt Hospital, Mumbai.
What are kidney stones?
Kidney stones are small, hard bits of crystals that have grown in the kidney, made of minerals like calcium that are filtered by the kidney. They can be small, much smaller than a pea, but the symptoms the stone causes and it's adverse effects on the upper urinary tract can be significant and complicated.
How do kidney stones form?
Kidneys filter the blood by removing excess water and metabolic end-products of ingested food and drugs, to produce urine. Urine passes from each kidney down a conduit called the ureter into the urinary bladder, then out of the body through the urethra once the bladder becomes full. Many constituents of urine are soluble in the urine and these pass as solution in urine. But there are some constituents which are not soluble in urine. These chemicals pass in urine as small crystals in urine which can clump together to form a stone.
What are the symptoms of kidney stones?
Passing a kidney stone has been described as one of the worst pains, one can experience! Not surprising that female patients with urinary calculi often describe this pain as akin to labour pain. They're usually without symptoms when they're growing in the kidney, but when they pass down the very narrow tube called the ureter, they can get stuck and cause severe pain called ‘renal colic’. Renal colic is an intermittent severe pain in your back or side that might move into your pelvis, upper thighs or towards the external urinary opening as the stone is passing down to the bladder. It's often associated with nausea and vomiting and frequent urination. There may be blood in the urine, occasionally patients may get fever also.