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Friday, April 19, 2024

ADVOCATE TRINITY HOSPITAL: This painful condition is on the rise among women

Kidney

Advocate Trinity Hospital issued the following announcement on Feb. 7.

If you’ve experienced them, you know the pain is unbearable. In fact, some women who have suffered from this and gone through childbirth say it’s more painful than having a baby. What are they?

Kidney stones.

Hard, pebble-like deposits that form for a variety of reasons, kidney stones are composed of chemicals normally secreted in the urine. Solid crystals form in the kidney when there is an excess amount of waste in a small amount of liquid. These crystals join together to make kidney stones that hopefully exit the body in the urine.

Stones come in all shapes and sizes and can be as small as a grain of sand or as big as a golf ball. The bigger the stone, the more noticeable the symptoms, which also include fever, chills, nausea and vomiting and extreme, sharp pain in the back or side.

Recently, Mayo Clinic researchers conducted a study, determining kidney stone diagnoses are increasing. By analyzing the health records of more than 7,200 individuals, they found women between the ages 18-39 developed kidney stones more frequently than men.

Researchers did point out, however, that the results may be caused by better diagnostic testing over time.

“I frequently do see female patients,” says Dr. Tony Tran, a urologist with Aurora Health Care.

“My general recommendations for the prevention of stones that will help the vast majority of patients with a history of kidney stones are the following:”

Drink enough water to produce two to three liters of urine per day

Limit both salt intake and animal protein intake

“Beyond these general recommendations, some people will form stones regardless,” says Dr. Tran. These patients tend to have an underlying metabolic reason for forming stones and typically will require more extensive work up and may need to be placed on medications that can help prevent stones along with the general recommendations.”

Original source can be found here.

Source: Advocate Trinity Hospital

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