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So Long, Kidney Stone!

Wheezebucket

Master Cylinder
Joined
Jan 14, 2006
Messages
1,491
Ok so I'm getting this 4 1/2cm stone "blasted" out of my bladder on Monday. It's been stuck in another section of my disqusting innards for the last year, and passed into my bladder last Friday (which sent me into the emergency room). Now I've passed 7-8 stones over the years, but this surgery thing is new to me and I have very little confidence in the hospital where it's being done. I had to see three different doctors, a rotating door of nurses, and several clerks - all of them, every single time, talked about my pain being on the right hand side (fun fact - it's on my left). They accidentally made two seperate files for me and kept seperating my information, and one nurse left me waiting for 55 minutes while she went to check a spelling error on some sheet - then sent a new nurse to take her place (who, what a shocker, misplaced my information).

In the end I guess that stuff doesn't worry me too badly. But I would like to know if anyone else here on the forum has had any kidney stone related surgeries, and if so, care to share the tale? So far they haven't really told me anything about the procedure, but I plan to quiz them all pretty intensely before they put me under on Monday.

(not so) Interesting side note - not a single solitary plant in that friggin' place. Not one! I always thought that was like nation-wide hospital law when I was kid. At least one plant, even a fake one. Ridiculous.
 
Suggest you Google "Lithotrypsy". Blasting is NOT surgery. More like ultrasonic watch cleaning. They use two 'speakers' in unison, the sound waves meet at the stone and it crumbles. Big amp, Bitchen balance control. All while you sit in a fancy chair. Then, the broken glass shards pass out, scratching the piss out of you all the way. More painful than childbirth and getting a sharp stick in the eye at the same time. I'm kidding about the pain, but what you are going through now will make the rest worth it for the relief.
 
Ok so I'm getting this 4 1/2cm stone "blasted" out of my bladder on Monday. It's been stuck in another section of my disqusting innards for the last year, and passed into my bladder last Friday.
I think you meant 4 1/2 mm
(Unless your ureter is disgustingly large :D )
 
Thanks for the info! It seems pretty straight forward and matches what little they did already tell me. Now let's just hope all these galstones they found sit tight and wait their turn.
 
Many hospitals have banned plants due to their ability to carry bacteria,etc.
Last ten + years.
 
No kidding? Yeah I thought it was so nuts, every waiting room was identical. No plants, no pictures, nothing. Not even a fish tank! They do have copies sitting around of the local Braham newspaper, so I got to check out their sweet "Faith & Families" section, but other than that it's barren.
 
4 1/2mm, your correction was spot on. I go in tomorrow morning at 10:45 to get it taken care of.
 
No kidding? Yeah I thought it was so nuts, every waiting room was identical. No plants, no pictures, nothing. Not even a fish tank! They do have copies sitting around of the local Braham newspaper, so I got to check out their sweet "Faith & Families" section, but other than that it's barren.

No pictures, no old magazines - that's another matter!!! My doctor (who unfortunately has some woo tendencies in the area of nutrician (nutrients concentrated in pills and information provided by a continuous dvd in his waiting room) and the power of a blue light laser to reduce pain) had fish, has magazines and wooish or not, saved my life or at least lengthened it when he suggested after a small PSA rise that I should check with a urologist. I did, I had it, he cut it out. It had passed the capsule, but I am fine and, as best the tests show cancer free.

What material, assuming they have said, are your stones made of?
 
That's the problem so far, since they haven't been able to get at it, they have no idea. I was told they'd be analyzing it after the procedure to figure all that out, and I'm hoping they find something because as of early this morning I've been having trouble peeing. No blood or pain or anything, but it's like...difficult to coerce it into going (if that makes any sense).

Here's hoping I don't have an infection. But considering I carried this thing around for the past year with no problems I wouldn't be surprised if a new one jumped up now, just to slap me in the face, heh. Stupid body.

I should also mention as a sidenote that the only reason I'm able to afford any of this is because Complexity pointed me in the right direction of the Medicaid stuff a while back, so if you're reading this, thanks!
 
That's the problem so far, since they haven't been able to get at it, they have no idea. I was told they'd be analyzing it after the procedure to figure all that out, and I'm hoping they find something because as of early this morning I've been having trouble peeing. No blood or pain or anything, but it's like...difficult to coerce it into going (if that makes any sense).

I Am Not a Doctor, but I am a medical transcriptionist for a urologist's office, so I hear about this a lot. It sounds like you were developing urinary retention. I hope you called your doctor, or at least mentioned it when you went in for lithotripsy this morning.

Speaking of your lithotripsy, I hope they were able to fragment the stone easily and well!

As far as stone analysis is concerned, they won't be able to test the stone composition until he has passed and retrieved some of the fragments for them. Given the number of stones he says he has passed and any information gleaned from the stone analysis, they may do 24-hour urine tests to see if he's secreting too much or too little of certain things in his urine (citrate and calcium oxalate are the two I hear about). If that is the case, they may put him on dietary restrictions or medication in an effort to control the imbalance.

This reminds me to check Bpesta's kidney stone thread over in Forum Community....

Fuelair, it's good to hear that your doctor was so cautious and they caught it.
 
On average, a 5mm stone will pass naturally. Yours is less than 5mm. Do you have a small urethra?
 
Generally they do pass at less than 5, yeah, but 4 1/2 isn't unheard of and my urethra is normal. Doesn't really matter anyways because I just got back from the hospital and - hey guess what - they didn't find anything. They saw it last time, it was the whole reason they set this up, and I damn sure don't remember passing it. Nothing. There was a fair amount of swearing. Good thing that cost me 8 billion dollars.

So now I have to schedule an appointment with some other doctor who will probably tell me just as much as the other ones did (nothing) and jerk me around even more while I sit here trying not to pass out when I pee. At least it'll cost me thousands of dollars a visit, which works out nicely in relation to the 5 minutes on average I spend with each doctor.

I'm about to just give up and live with it and hope for the best.

Oh and thanks for the info Obsequious, I did make sure to mention it to him today when I went in, he didn't seem to care much or touch on it in any way despite my repeated comments, and then when I woke up he was already gone, so I never even got to talk to him afterwards. The nurses just told me that it all looked fine and they had no idea what the pain was from and sent me on my way.
 
I had a kidney stone and it brought me to my knees... and I was in the hospital for 6 1/2 hours. I passed it at home into one of those screened cups they give you. It was the size of a grain of pepper.

I have heard that if you drink lots of water, you reduce the risk of kidney stones, as you are more apt to be flush your system out, even if your body DOES retain certain things that would be cause for dietary restrictions.

I never drank a stitch of water, and I was only drinking coffee and beer; both diuretics during this period of my life.
 
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So now I have to schedule an appointment with some other doctor who will probably tell me just as much as the other ones did (nothing) and jerk me around even more while I sit here trying not to pass out when I pee. At least it'll cost me thousands of dollars a visit, which works out nicely in relation to the 5 minutes on average I spend with each doctor.

I'm about to just give up and live with it and hope for the best.

Well, there you go. That's one thing you get for listening to the advice from these Western practitioners.

If you had just avoided all forms of municipal water supplies and obtained your liquid intake from real homeopathic sources you would likely never have had this problem.

BTW, the obligatory :eek:. I passed a stone a few years ago while on a camping trip a long way from anywhere. A great deal of merriment was had by all but me.
Good luck.
 
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I Am Not a Doctor, but I am a medical transcriptionist for a urologist's office, so I hear about this a lot. It sounds like you were developing urinary retention. I hope you called your doctor, or at least mentioned it when you went in for lithotripsy this morning.

Speaking of your lithotripsy, I hope they were able to fragment the stone easily and well!

As far as stone analysis is concerned, they won't be able to test the stone composition until he has passed and retrieved some of the fragments for them. Given the number of stones he says he has passed and any information gleaned from the stone analysis, they may do 24-hour urine tests to see if he's secreting too much or too little of certain things in his urine (citrate and calcium oxalate are the two I hear about). If that is the case, they may put him on dietary restrictions or medication in an effort to control the imbalance.

This reminds me to check Bpesta's kidney stone thread over in Forum Community....

Fuelair, it's good to hear that your doctor was so cautious and they caught it.

There is also protein (I know because it's the only one of my three that was caught so it could be analysed). All of mine hurt in a crippling way so I sympathathise!!!!
 
There is also protein (I know because it's the only one of my three that was caught so it could be analysed). All of mine hurt in a crippling way so I sympathathise!!!!

As in...a protein kidney stone? Really? Sounds like that would be more muscley rather than stone-like.
 
As in...a protein kidney stone? Really? Sounds like that would be more muscley rather than stone-like.

I agree - but I didn't analyse it - the doctors did. I had never heard of one myself - but I guarantee it hurt like a .....
 
I had a kidney stone and it brought me to my knees... and I was in the hospital for 6 1/2 hours. I passed it at home into one of those screened cups they give you.
It was the size of a grain of pepper.
You little weaky, Iamme :D
 

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