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Kidney Stones
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Symptoms
Kidney stones
form in the kidney. If they stay in the kidney, they do not typically cause
pain. When they travel out of the body through the tubes of the
urinary tract
(including the
ureters, which connect the kidney to the bladder, or
the
urethra, which leads outside the body), their movement
may cause:
- No symptoms, if the stone is small enough.
- Sudden, severe pain that gets worse in waves. Stones may cause intense pain in the back, side, abdomen, groin, or genitals. People who have had a kidney stone often describe the pain as "the worst pain I've ever had."
- Feeling sick to the stomach (nausea) and vomiting.
- Blood in the urine (hematuria), which can occur either with stones that stay in the kidney or with those that travel through the ureters.
- Frequent and painful urination, which may occur when the stone is in the ureter or after the stone has left the bladder and is in the urethra. Painful urination may occur when a urinary tract infection is also present.
- Conditions with similar symptoms include appendicitis, hernias, ectopic pregnancy, and prostatitis.
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Last Updated:
May 4, 2009- Author:
- Monica Rhodes
- Medical Review:
- Kathleen Romito, MD - Family Medicine
Philip Belitsky, MD, FRCSC - Urology
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