Kidney Stones
Kidney Stones
How do kidney stones form?
How are kidney stones treated?
- Adjust your diet to limit intake of high-risk foods
- Avoid crash, extreme weight-loss diets
- Moderate your alcohol intake
- Check your family medical history
- Have regular medical check-ups
- Take steps to control underlying medical conditions
- Consult your healthcare provider, to get professional medical advice
Pharmacological intervention
- Help pass your kidney stone (diuretic, alpha-blocker)
- Reduce renal colic episodes (non-steroid anti-inflammatory drugs)
- Make your urine less acidic (urinary-alkalinizer)
- Supportive care may also be provided with rehydration therapy, pain relievers, or antiemetics (nausea, vomiting)
Surgical procedures
- too large, or block urinary flow
- delicately located and posing a risk of bleeding, kidney damage
- a sign of recurrent kidney stones and ongoing urinary tract infections
Causes and risk factors
- Insufficient water intake
- Dietary choices e.g. high-protein, high sodium (salt), low-fibre intake
- Alcohol intake
- Exercise (too little or too much)
- Family or personal history of stone disease
- Pre-existing medical conditions e.g. dehydration, chronic diarrhoea, obesity, malabsorption, hypertension, diabetes, urinary tract infections
- Habitual use of certain medications e.g. antacids, laxatives
- Trauma or surgery e.g. gastric bypass surgery
Men have double the risk of developing a kidney stone than women 2,3
Signs and symptoms of kidney stones
- Severe pain (also known as renal colic) on either side of your lower back, which may be accompanied by high temperature
- Frequent urination and persistent urge to urinate
- Blood in the urine
- Urine that smells bad or looks cloudy

Medical References
Medical References
The information on this website is meant to give general knowledge only. It is not medical advice and should not replace advice, diagnosis, or treatment from a doctor. It also doesn’t set a specific way that care should be given.Always talk to your doctor or a qualified healthcare professional if you have any health questions or concerns. Don’t ignore or delay getting medical help because of something you read on this website.Medical information is always changing, so the details on this site—or any sites it links to—might not be fully accurate or up to date. You should not use this information to make medical decisions for yourself or others. If you do, you are doing so at your own risk.