Kidney stones are hard objects made of minerals and salts in urine. They form inside the kidneys. You may hear healthcare professionals refer to kidney stones as renal calculi, nephrolithiasis or urolithiasis.
Kidney stones have various causes. These include diet, extra body weight, some health conditions, and some supplements and medicines. Kidney stones can affect any of the organs that make urine or remove it from the body — from the kidneys to the bladder. Often, stones form when the urine has less water in it. This lets minerals form crystals and stick together.
Passing kidney stones can be quite painful. But prompt treatment usually helps prevent any lasting damage. Sometimes, the only treatment needed to pass a kidney stone is taking pain medicine and drinking lots of water. Other times, surgery or other treatments may be needed. It depends on size, location and the type of stone you have.
If you've had more than one kidney stone, your healthcare professional can show you ways to prevent more. This may involve making diet changes, taking medicine or both.
A kidney stone usually doesn't cause symptoms until it moves around within the kidney or passes into one of the ureters. The ureters are the tubes that connect the kidneys and bladder.
If a kidney stone gets stuck in one of the ureters, it may block the flow of urine and cause the kidney to swell and the ureter to spasm. That can be very painful. At that point, you may have these symptoms:
Other symptoms may include:
Pain caused by a kidney stone may change as the stone moves through your urinary tract. For instance, the pain may shift to a different part of the body or become more intense.
Make an appointment with your healthcare professional if you have any symptoms that worry you.
Get a healthcare checkup right away if you have:
Kidney stones often have no definite, single cause. But many factors may raise your risk.
Kidney stones develop when the urine contains more crystal-forming substances than the fluid in the urine can dilute. These substances include calcium oxalate, calcium phosphate and uric acid. At the same time, the urine may lack substances that prevent crystals from sticking together. That creates an ideal setting for kidney stones to form.
Knowing the type of kidney stone you have helps your healthcare professional figure out its cause and the right treatment for you. This information also can give clues on how to prevent more kidney stones. If you can, try to save your kidney stone if you pass one. Then bring it to your healthcare professional, who can check on what type of kidney stone it is.
Types of kidney stones include:
Calcium stones. Most kidney stones are calcium stones. They're usually made of the chemical compound calcium oxalate. Oxalate is a substance made daily by the liver or absorbed from diet. Some fruits and vegetables, as well as nuts and chocolate, have high amounts of oxalate.
Dietary factors, high doses of vitamin D, intestinal bypass surgery and many conditions that affect metabolism can make calcium or oxalate more concentrated in urine.
Calcium stones also can be made of calcium phosphate. This type of stone is more common in metabolic conditions such as renal tubular acidosis. It also may be linked with some medicines for migraines or seizures such as topiramate (Topamax, Trokendi XR, others).
Factors that raise your risk of kidney stones include:
Prevention of kidney stones may include a mix of lifestyle changes and medicines.
You may lower your risk of kidney stones if you:
Drink water throughout the day. This is the most important lifestyle change you can make. If you've had kidney stones before, your healthcare professional may tell you to drink enough fluids to pass about 2.1 quarts (2 liters) of urine a day or more. You may be asked to measure how much urine you pass to make sure that you're drinking enough water.
If you live in a hot, dry climate or you exercise often, you may need to drink even more water to produce enough urine. If your urine is light and clear, you're likely drinking enough water.
Keep eating calcium-rich foods, but use caution with calcium supplements. Calcium in food doesn't have an effect on your risk of kidney stones. Keep eating calcium-rich foods unless your healthcare professional recommends otherwise.
Ask your healthcare professional before taking calcium supplements. These have been linked with a higher risk of kidney stones. You may lower the risk by taking supplements with meals. Diets low in calcium can make kidney stones more likely to form in some people.
Ask your healthcare professional to refer you to a dietitian. The dietitian can help you make an eating plan that lowers your risk of kidney stones.
Medicines can control the amount of minerals and salts in the urine. They may be helpful in people who form certain kinds of stones. The type of medicine that your healthcare professional prescribes depends on the kind of kidney stones you have. Here are some examples:
Diagnosis involves the steps that your healthcare professional takes to find out if you have kidney stones. Diagnosis also can include testing to find the cause and chemical makeup of kidney stones. Your healthcare professional starts by giving you a physical exam. You also may need tests such as:
Imaging. Imaging tests such as CT scans may show kidney stones in your urinary tract. An advanced scan known as a high-speed or dual energy CT scan may help find tiny uric acid stones. Simple X-rays of the stomach area, also called the abdomen, are used less often. That's because this kind of imaging test can miss small kidney stones.
Ultrasound is another imaging option to diagnose kidney stones.
Treatment for kidney stones varies. It depends on the type of stone and the cause.
Most small kidney stones don't require invasive treatment such as surgery. You may be able to pass a small stone by:
Kidney stones that are too large to pass on their own may need more-extensive treatment. So might stones that cause bleeding, kidney damage or ongoing urinary tract infections. Treatments may include:
Using sound waves to break up stones. For some kidney stones, your healthcare professional may recommend a treatment called extracorporeal shock wave lithotripsy. This also is known as ESWL. But it depends on the size and location of your stones.
ESWL uses sound waves to create strong vibrations called shock waves that break the stones into tiny pieces that can be passed in urine. The treatment lasts about 45 to 60 minutes. It can cause moderate pain, so you may be given medicines to prevent pain or help relax you.
ESWL can cause blood in the urine and bruising on the back or stomach area. It also can cause bleeding around the kidney and around other nearby organs. It can cause discomfort as the stone fragments pass through the urinary tract too.
Surgery to remove very large stones in the kidney. A surgery called percutaneous nephrolithotomy (nef-row-lih-THOT-uh-me) involves removing a kidney stone using small telescopes and tools inserted through a small cut in the back or side.
You receive medicine called a general anesthetic that prevents pain and puts you in a sleep-like state during the surgery. You'll likely recover in the hospital for 1 to 3 days afterward. Your healthcare professional may recommend this surgery if ESWL doesn't help you enough.
Using a scope to remove stones. To remove a smaller stone in your ureter or kidney, your surgeon may use a thin lighted tube called a ureteroscope. This instrument is equipped with a camera. The surgeon places the uteroscope through the urethra and bladder to the ureter.
Once the stone is found, special tools can snare the stone or break it into pieces that will pass in the urine. Then the surgeon may place a small tube called a stent in the ureter to relieve swelling and support healing. You may need general or local anesthesia during this procedure.
Parathyroid gland surgery. Some calcium phosphate stones are caused by overactive parathyroid glands. These glands are located on the four corners of the thyroid gland, just below the Adam's apple. When these glands make too much parathyroid hormone, that's a condition known as hyperparathyroidism. The condition can cause calcium levels to become too high, and kidney stones may form as a result.
Hyperparathyroidism sometimes happens when a small tumor that isn't cancer forms in one of the parathyroid glands. Or hyperparathyroidism can happen if you develop another condition that leads these glands to make more parathyroid hormone. Removing the tumor from the gland stops kidney stones from forming. Or your healthcare professional may recommend treatment of the condition that's causing your parathyroid gland to make too much of the hormone.
Small kidney stones that don't block your kidney or cause other health troubles can be treated by your primary healthcare professional. But if you have a large kidney stone and have serious pain or kidney troubles, you may need to see a specialist. Your healthcare professional may refer you to a doctor called a urologist or a nephrologist who treats conditions of the urinary tract.
To prepare for your appointment:
For kidney stones, some basic questions include:
Feel free to ask any other questions during your appointment.
Your healthcare professional is likely to ask you questions such as: