Patient Education: Having Pain in the Kidneys, It may be Kidney Stones.
By admin
Published: August 13, 2009

kidney stones
KIDNEY STONES IN THE NEWS.
- Kidney stones affect approximately 12 percent of men and 5 percent of women by age 70.
- Treatment is available to effectively manage most stones.
- Recurrence can occur at a rate of up to 5 percent per year.
- calcium kidney stones.
- oxalate kidney stones.
- cystine kidney stones.
- uric acid kidney stones.
When these substances are at high levels in the urine they precipitate out of solution and become solid crystals which get stuck somewhere in the tract from the kidney to the ureter and bladder, the kidney stone then forms particularly at narrow points along the way.
KIDNEY STONE RISK FACTORS
- High concentrations of calcium, oxalate or uric acid in the urine.
- Low pH (urine too acidic)
- Concentrated urine (poor fluid intake)
- Not eating enough calcium (you absorb too much oxalate if calcium is low)
- Eating too much calcium
- High sugar intake
- High protein intake.
- High sodium intake.
- Gout
- Diabetes Mellitus
- Obesity
- Gastric bypass
- Primary hyperparathyroidism.
- Crohn’s disease.
KIDNEY STONE SYMPTOMS INCLUDE
DIAGNOSIS OF KIDNEY STONES
KIDNEY STONES NEWS FROM ACROSS THE INTERNET UPDATEDrequire_once ‘/home3/allkidne/carp/carp.php’; CarpConf(‘cborder’,'date,’); ‘);
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About Roger: Dr. Roger Smith is a nephrologist currently employed to the government of Jamaica. He is the Nephrologist in charge of Spanish Town Dialysis Unit. His interests are lupus nephritis and other glomerulopathies. He was previously a lecturer in Nephrology at the University of the West Indies in the Department of Internal Medicine and Coordinator of the Urogenital Module before moving into private and government practice. |
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