Kidney Stones
What are "Kidney Stones" ?
Crystals form in urine from various
salts that build up on the inner surfaces of the kidney. Eventually these
crystals become large enough to form stones in the kidney (called
nephrolithiasis).
There are many different kinds of
Kidney stones.
Such salts may include calcium oxalate, uric acid, cystine, or xanthine.
These salts can become extremely concentrated under certain circumstances: if
the volume of urine is significantly reduced (chronic thirst
and dehydration); or if abnormally high amounts of crystal-forming salts
are present (infection). When concentration levels reach the point at
which the salts no longer dissolve, they precipitate out and form
crystals.
Stones may also form in the ureter
or the bladder. The salts that form these stones are made up of combinations of
minerals and other chemicals, some of which are derived from a person's diet.
How to prevent kidney stones?
Drink
Water, eat mellons, cleanse your kidneys, avoid dehydration, avoid coffee,
avoid chocolate, avoid industrial products, improve your diet, improve your
lifestyle ...
Most Common Kidney Stones:
Calcium Stones. About
70% to 80% of all kidney stones are composed of calcium, usually combined with
oxalate, or oxalic acid. (Oxalate is found in a number of common vegetables,
fruits, and grains.) About 6% of calcium stones are composed of calcium
phosphate (called brushite).
Uric Acid Stones. About 7% of stones are made up of uric acid,
which, in spite of its name, is actually a crystal that is the end product of
purine metabolism, a nitrogen compound found in protein.
Struvite Stones. Struvite stones, which are made of magnesium
ammonium phosphate, are almost always associated with certain urinary tract
infections. Although studies to date estimate that up to 20% of all kidney
stones are struvite, a recent analysis of 37,400 specimens suggests that only
about 2% are struvite. The incidence in these stones therefore may be declining,
perhaps because of better control over infections.
Other Kidney Stones. About 2% of stones are made from cystine.
Xanthine is a nitrogen compound (caffeine is a derivative of this substance).
They are extremely uncommon and usually occur as a result of a rare genetic
disorder.
WHAT CAUSES KIDNEY STONES?
General Biologic Events Leading
to Kidney Stones

There are 4 events leading to kidney stones:
# 1: Thirst and dehydration ...
leading to supersaturation of urine with
certain salts, and leading to stones.
The key process in the development of kidney stones is supersaturation of
urine.
If you don't drink adequate
amount of water every few hours, or you are replacing water with cola,
coffee, tea ... you are risking dehydration
and supersaturation
of urine!
# 2: Lack of protective factors
Normally, urine contains protective factors that
include magnesium, citrate, pyrophosphate, and various proteins and enzymes.
These compounds may protect against stone formation in various ways:
- Allowing salt in the urine to be at
higher-than-normal concentrations without forming crystals.
- Preventing crystal formation.
- Coating the crystals and preventing them for
adhering to the tube surface.
Deficiencies in these protective substances
therefore cause stones.
# 3: Changes in the Acidity of the Urine.
Changes in the balance of acid to alkaline in the urine can
affect stone precipitation.
- Uric acid and cystine stones thrive in acidic
urine
- Calcium phosphate and struvite stones thrive
in alkaline.
# 4: Factors that Bind Crystals to the Kidney
Tubules.
Researchers are studying the cells lining the kidney
tubules in order to understand how and why early crystals bind to the tubes long
enough to form stones. Under investigation are elevated levels of substances
that either cause crystals to adhere to the tubes or deficiencies in those that
prevent them from sticking.
CAUSES OF KIDNEY STONES
Kidney stones develop as a result of a complicated interaction
of biologic events that are most likely triggered by genetic susceptibility
coupled with dietary factors and lifestyle.
Causes of Calcium Stones
In general, calcium stones form when there are imbalances of
components in the urine that either promote or inhibit formation of the stone.
Excess Calcium in the Urine (Hypercalciuria).
Hypercalciuria, in which there is too much calcium in the urine, is responsible
for about 70% of calcium-combining stones. A number of conditions may produce
hypercalciuria. Here are some theories and actual causes:
- Overly efficient intestinal absorption of calcium. In more
than half of cases, the source of excess calcium overload in urine is from the
intestine, not the kidney. In most cases, a combination of genetic factors
conspires to increase calcium absorption. Researchers are investigating a
number of suspects, including a possible defective gene that regulates
calcitriol, a form of vitamin D, which, in excess levels, may increase
intestinal absorption of calcium.
- Excessive chloride. Chloride has a negative charge and
calcium a positive one, so they are often used by the body to balance each
other. Excess chloride, then, may lead to excess calcium. A gene known as
CLCN5, which regulates chloride in the urine, is defective in many patients
with calcium stones.
- Renal calcium leak. This is a condition in which the
filtering processes in the kidney fail, causing an increase of calcium in the
urine.
- Excessive sodium. Calcium absorption in the kidney tubules
follows the absorption of sodium and water. High urinary levels of sodium then
results in increased levels of calcium. Defects in the kidney tubules
transport system can cause imbalances in sodium and phosphate that result in
elevated calcium in the urine. A high salt diet can also produce this effect.
- Certain cancers and sarcoidosis (a chronic disorder marked
by small lumps on organs) can cause excess calcium.
- Many drugs, including thyroid hormones and loop diuretics
(drugs that increase urination), can increase calcium concentration in urine.
Stones are an uncommon side effect of these medications, however.
Excess Oxalate in the Urine (Hyperoxaluria).
Oxalate, also called oxalic acid, combines with calcium to form
calcium oxalate which is the most common stone-forming compound. Excessive
oxalate in the urine (hyperoxaluria) is responsible for about 30% of calcium
stones and is a more common cause of stones than too much calcium in the urine.
A number of conditions can contribute to hyperoxaluria:
- Primary hyperoxaluria (type I or type II). This is an
inherited disorder associated with kidney stones.
- Deficiencies of pyridoxine (vitamin B6). Severe vitamin B6
deficiencies (usually due to genetic disorders) can result in overproduction
of oxalic acid.
- Short bowel syndrome. Short bowel syndrome is the result of
surgery in the small intestine that results in malabsorption. This disorder is
the inability of the intestines to absorb fat and nutrients. In such cases,
calcium may bind to unabsorbed fat instead of to oxalates. This leaves excess
oxalate, which is absorbed by the intestine and excreted into the kidney.
People with Crohn's disease, intestinal infections, and children with
structural abnormalities in the small intestine are at risk for these
procedures and short bowel syndrome.
- Dietary oxalates. Whether eating foods rich in oxalates or
taking too much vitamin C plays any major role in hyperoxaluria is unproven.
One Swiss study suggests that certain people may be hypersensitive to meat
protein, rendering them susceptible to mild hyperoxaluria. [For foods
containing oxalates, see How Can Kidney Stones Be Prevented?, below.]
- Hormones. One 1999 animal study suggested that male
hormones may account for the greater risk for kidney stones in men. Androgens
(male hormones) were associated with a higher risk for calcium oxalate
crystals formation while estrogens (female hormones) decreased it. This
finding is consistent with others, suggesting that estrogen may protect
against the formation of calcium stones by keeping urine alkaline and raising
citrate levels. Whether hormone replacement actually prevents stones in older
women is not yet determined, however.
Excessive Calcium in the Bloodstream (Hypercalcemia).
Hypercalcemia generally occurs when bones break down
and release too much calcium into the bloodstream. This is a process called
resorption, which can occur because of the following:
- Hyperparathyroidism. Overactive parathyroid glands are the
causes of about 5% of calcium stones. And people with this disorder have at
least a 20% chance of kidney stones. Women are more likely to have this
disorder than men are.
- Immobilization.
- Renal tubular acidosis, disorder that causes acid and
alkaline imbalance. It not only increases calcium in the blood stream, it also
reduces citrate levels [ see below ].
Low Urine Levels of Citrate (Hypocitraturia) and Other
Stone-Inhibiting Compounds. Citrate is the primary
agent for removal of excess calcium. Low levels in the urine, known as
hypocitraturia, are a significant risk factor for calcium (and also uric acid)
stones. Many conditions can reduce citrate levels, but often the causes of
hypocitraturia severe enough to cause stones are unknown:
- Renal tubular acidosis. This disorder results in
abnormalities in the acid and alkaline balance in the body's fluids, which
causes a reduction of citrate in the urine. To make matters worse, the
disorder also causes bone resorption and increases calcium levels in the
blood.
- Potassium or magnesium deficiency.
- Urinary tract infection.
- Kidney failure.
- Chronic diarrhea.
In addition to citrate, other substances in urine also prevent
calcium from precipitating out or forming calcium stones. Some of these include
nephrocalcin-A and uropontin (molecules known as glycoproteins),
glycosaminoglycan, magnesium, and pyrophosphate.
Nanobacteria Infection. An interesting focus of
investigation is the discovery of extremely tiny bacteria, termed
nanobacteria, which are able to pass from the blood into urine. Such
bacteria coat themselves with mineral deposits that resemble the composition of
kidney stones. Cells infected with the bacteria develop mineral deposits both on
the inside and outside. Researchers hypothesize that such bacteria may provide
the core kidney stones in many people.
Causes of Uric Acid Stones
Excessive Amounts of Uric Acid (Hyperuricuria).
Uric acid stones most often form out of high concentrations of
uric acid crystals (hyperuricuria). Such crystals are made from purine, a
nitrogen end product of dietary protein. They are not related to the acidity of
the urine itself, although in the majority of uric acid stones, the urine is so
persistently acidic that even normal amounts of uric acid can precipitate and
form stones. (About 10% to 20% of cases of uric acid stones are found in urine
with normal pH values.) A number of conditions contribute to hyperuricuria:
- Genetic factors.
- Diets overly rich in animal proteins.
- Gout.
- Certain medications (chemotherapy agents, diuretics, and
salicylates).
- Binge drinking.
- Fasting.
- Lead toxicity.
- Blood diseases (leukemia, certain uncommon anemias,
multiple myeloma, and lymphomas).
- Chronic diarrhea.
Note: Hyperuricuria may also play a role in some calcium
oxalate stones. In this case, urate (the salt formed from uric acid) creates a
crystal nidus (the nucleus of a crystal), around which calcium oxalate
crystals form and grow. Such stones tend to be severe and recurrent.
Causes of Struvite Stones
Struvite stones are almost always caused by urinary tract
infections due to bacteria that secrete certain enzymes. These enzymes, in turn,
raise urine concentrations of the ammonia that composes the crystals forming
struvite stones. The stone-promoting bacteria are usually Proteus, but
may also include Pseudomonas, Klebsiella, Providencia,
Serratia, and staphylococci. Women are twice as likely to have struvite
stones than men are.
Causes of Other Kidney Stones
Other stones, including cystine and xanthine stones, are
usually due to genetic abnormalities.
Causes of Cystine Stones. Cystine stones are found in
patients with an inherited disorder that causes abnormal transport in the kidney
and gastrointestinal system of the amino acids cystine, ornithine, lysine, and
arginine.
Causes of Xanthine Stones. In some cases, xanthine
stones may develop in patients being treated with allopurinol for gout.
WHAT ARE THE SYMPTOMS OF KIDNEY STONES?
In many cases, kidney stones develop without producing any
symptoms. However, if they become lodged in the ureter (the thin tubes between
the bladder and the kidney), symptoms can be very severe. Often, they vary
depending on the stone's location and then progress.
- Pain usually begins abruptly on one side and then usually
continues as intense, constant pain. (In some cases it persists for a few
minutes, resolves, and then returns after about 10 minutes.)
- The patient cannot become comfortable and usually stands,
sits, paces, or reclines in a vain search for a position that will bring
relief.
- If the stone is in the kidney or upper urinary tract, the
pain usually occurs in one flank area (to the side of the back near the
waist).
- If the stone moves down, the pain may move to the groin.
- If the stone is too large to pass easily, the pain follows
the muscle contractions in the wall of the ureter as they try to squeeze the
stone along into the bladder.
- Nausea and vomiting may occur.
- Bleeding may occur if the stone becomes larger or moves.
- As the stone passes down the ureter closer to the bladder,
a person may feel the need to urinate more often or a burning sensation during
urination.
- If fever and chills accompany any of these symptoms, an
infection may be present.
It should be noted that the size of the stone does not
necessarily predict to the severity of the pain; a very tiny crystal with sharp
edges can cause intense pain while a larger round stone may not be as
distressing.
HOW SERIOUS ARE KIDNEY STONES?
Pain: Between 70% and
90% of crystals remain tiny enough so that they can travel through the urinary
tract and pass out of the body in the urine without being noticed. When they
cause symptoms, however, kidney stones have been described as one of the most
painful disorders to afflict humans.
Many people develop kidney stones, without ever knowing it
happened to them. Stones can be formed painlessly, and can be dissolved
painlessly without that you know you have ever had them.
Why pain?
Cause stones can be very sharp! Stones can cut tissues and cause bleeding.
Risk for Recurrence
Calcium stones recur in 10% of
patients within a year of the first attack, in 33% within five years, and in 50%
by 10 years. Individual risk for recurrence, however, varies. For example, a
15-year old patient with inherited cystine stones has much higher than average
odds for recurrence, while a middle-aged old man with a first calcium oxalate
stone has a good chance of never passing another.
Effects on the Urinary Tract and Kidney
Obstruction and Infection.
Although obstruction of the urinary tract often
occurs, it is usually temporary and causes no lasting damage. In some cases,
however, particularly if the obstruction progresses silently, infection may
occur, which can be serious and which warrants prompt attention.
Kidney Failure.
It is very rare for kidney stones to cause kidney failure. But, the risk factors
for kidney failure and risk factors for kidney stones are identical:
dehydration!!!!!!!!
Some factors produce a higher risk. They include the
following:
- Very frequent recurrences (such as in people with inherited
kidney stone disorders).
- Accompanying episodes of urinary tract infections with
obstruction (such as from abnormal urinary tracts or spinal cord injuries).
- A history of multiple urologic procedures for kidney
stones.
- Size of the kidney stone gravel.
The Kidneys and Urinary Tract Anatomy and Physiology
The urinary system helps to maintain proper water and salt
balance throughout the body. The process of urination begins in the kidneys.
Kidneys act as blood filter, which process fluids and dissolved waste
matter to produce urine. The two kidneys are located deep behind the abdomen
below the ribs and toward the middle-back. They play a major role in this
process:
- Each kidney contains over a million nephrons.
These are the functional units of the kidney.
- Each nephron is composed of a tiny tuft of blood vessels (a
glomerulus) enclosed in a funnel-like structure called a
Bowman's capsule s.
- Each glomerulus filters waste products, water, and salts
out of the blood fluid (plasma) that has entered the kidney as it circulates
through the body.
- About 1% of the plasma is converted into urine. The rest is
returned into circulation to prevent dehydration. Urine's primary components
are acids and urea and creatine (nitrogen compounds).
- Urine passes from the Bowman's capsule into tiny tubules
that lead to large collecting tubes to the center of the kidney. As it passes
through this network it becomes increasingly concentrated.
- Urine then flows from kidney through thin tubes called
ureters into the bladder.
- The bladder's elastic walls expand to store the incoming
urine until it is eliminated from the body via another tube called the
urethra.
Signs and symptoms of Kidney
stones and poor kidney health are: Lower back pain, kidney pain, edema
("water holding"), like lungs edema, arms edema, legs edema, abdomen edema,
blood in urine, ...
It takes a lot of liquid to "wash" the inside of your body. Taking it in the
form of juice or herbal teas can give you some extra benefits and extra enjoyment, if you learn
to make them with variations - especially if you need to produce a gallon of
urine a day!
Any edema or "water holding", whether in lungs, arms, or abdomen, also
requires strengthening of kidneys with kidney cleansing.
Main symptom of kidney stones is a
pain in the lower and middle back (kidney area, or spine), but as that pain can
be excruciating, some people may feel the pain in different parts of their body.
There are hundreds of herbal
recipes, and many different homeopathic remedies used for cleansing kidney
stones.
According to the first hand
experience, the best recipe is Edgar Cayce's:
Read messages on Kidney
Cleanse Forum
Kidney cleanse can be very
important, even if you do not suffer lower back pain!
If your kidneys are not in the
perfect shape, they can create stones in very short period of time (several
hours or overnight), and you don't want that pain, trust me!
Functions of the Kidney
-
Elimination of metabolic wastes
-
Blood pressure regulation
-
Erythrocyte production - erythropoietin (stimulates red cell production)
-
Vitamin D activation
-
Prostaglandin synthesis
-
Acid - Base balance (excretes alkaline salts)
-
Fluid balance
-
Electrolyte balance
If you do not suffer kidney stones, (lower back pain), but you
want to prevent them, DRINK A LOT OF WATER! EAT A LOT OF WATERMELON! Take
Care what you are eating!
Sometimes, just a better diet with more water can be enough !
Read About
"Water Cure"!
But, also any form of bowel cleansing will also help kidneys !
Lemonade diet is also a Kidney cleanse,
Juice fasting is also
a kidney
cleanse, and any other form of fasting that incorporates a lot of liquids, will
in the same time clean a kidney.
Do you need special herbs ?
Only if you have acute lower back pain, clear symptom of
Kidney stones (sharp glass like crystals, made of phosphoric acid, or sometimes
may include other acids).
In special occasions, you can get a kidney stone crystallized
in less then a few days !!!
To melt a stone/stones, you may need a few weeks, or one day
with Watermelon Cleanse.
Watermelon Cleanse
NOT FOR DIABETICS !
The easiest way to cleanse Kidney is to purchase 20 - 100 kg of
watermelon (few huge melons), sit in a bath filed with water, eat all the watermelon
throughout a day (as much as you can), while continually empting your urinary bladder into the water.
In this way, people have dissolved big stones, and then passed small kidney
stones (sand) out of their body
Laughing Cure - Click Here
Kidney Cleanse from Dr. Hulda Clarks book
The Cure for All Diseases
explains in detail how to cleanse the kidneys, and her
cleansing program will get rid of most if not all the stones, WITHOUT surgery. It is not
difficult or complicated.
And she recommends it be done only after the parasites
cleanse.
Join Support group:
The two kidneys are part of both the Urinary and Endocrine Systems. They are two of the most important internal organs in the body primarily functioning to filter blood, regulate the urinary system and produce hormones. The process by which the kidneys channel pollutants and chemicals out of our systems by filtering toxic and potentially toxic chemicals from the bloodstream produces urine that carries waste materials from the body. The kidneys maintain a stable chemical balance and internal physical environment for cells by regulating water, electrolyte and acid base balances in the body. [In site cross reference: Salts that heal and Salts that kill for my researched information on restoring acid base balances in the body with unrefined sea salt].
As the primary removal site for potentially toxic and toxic chemicals each kidney contains 1.2 million filtering units called nephrons. Each nephron is the functional unit of the kidney having a glomerulus. In a process called filtration, blood containing waste products enter the glomerulus where the cells extract the water and waste products as urine, as the blood leaves. Blood flows into a network of capillaries surrounding each tubule from the glomerulus where substances that the body still needs such as water and certain salts are restored to the blood. The purified blood is then returned to general circulation throughout the body and waste in the form of urine passes through the ureter into the bladder. Astonishingly the kidneys can filter 500 quarts of blood daily most all of which is reabsorbed returning to the bloodstream. Look at the image on the left to discover it very descriptive of this process.
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