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The following is an opinion of an independent third party - not ERRX LLC
March is National Kidney Month
        Kidney stones can cause terrible pain


As many as half a million Americans suffer each year with the pain of kidney stones. The pain is often compared to the pain of childbirth for women. Men describe it as the worst pain they have ever had.

Though stones can develop at any age, they are most common between ages 30 and 50. Men are afflicted four times as often as women. A tendency for stones can be inherited, but diet and occupation are among other factors. They occur more often in people with sedentary jobs and during the summer months. Chronic urinary tract inflections contribute to the formation of stones. 

One of the most important ways to prevent stones is to regularly drink plenty of water. In people who form uric acid stones, it is wise to reduce intake of foods such as shellfish, liver, and kidneys. 

Even a tiny stone can cause severe pain when it begins to move to the bladder. Imagine a pebble the size of a green pea attempting to travel through a tube the width of a match stick. 

Doctors may first use pain control to see if the stone migrates into the bladder where it will not cause further pain. 

Some stones can be broken up with shock waves or a laser, then passed through the system. Doctors retrieve a stone by passing a lighted scope through the uretha to the position of the stone, then grasping it with a basket-like device attached to the scope. 

Surgical removal is now done in only 5 percent of cases. It is usually done for large stones or stones lodged in the kidney. 

Half of all people who have a first stone will have another within the next five to 10 years. They should discuss prevention methods with their doctors according to Johns Hopkins University. 

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