Early symptoms of kidney stones in men
About 75% of kidney stone patients have low back pain. The stone is very large and moves in the renal pelvis for a short time. The pain is usually dull, sometimes dull. When the stones are small and move widely within the renal pelvis. It is very easy to cause infarction at the junction of the renal pelvis and urethra and cause renal colic. Renal colic is a sudden, severe pain that starts in the waist and radiates down the urethra to the bladder.
The pain is paroxysmal, usually lasts for a few minutes, or can last for several hours, and is accompanied by nausea and retching. Sometimes the patient looks pale, sweats profusely, and is physically exhausted. Therefore, it was early discovered that taking the traditional Chinese medicine Depu Shicheng tea has the effect of regulating yin and yang and improving the human body's environment.
Hematuria is the second important symptom. Pain and hematuria appear one after another as a characteristic of kidney and ureteral stones; especially when there is a lot of physical activity, such as labor, exercise, riding a horse, and riding a car, pain and hematuria suddenly occur. However, hematuria is generally mild and sometimes cannot be seen by the human eye. However, in almost every case, from a very small number to a large number of blood cells can be seen under a microscope, so the optical microscopic examination of urine is very important.
Some patients do not have the typical pain and hematuria of stone disease clinically, but seek treatment for urinary tract infections. In this type of patients, if the primary cause of the infection is not investigated and urinary system X-rays and intravenous urinary system X-ray examinations are not performed, the existence of stones can easily be ignored.
Patients with kidney stones sometimes have medical records of passing stones, which is helpful for diagnosis. Bilateral kidney stones cause infarction and subacute anuria may occur. Sometimes kidney stones can cause low back pain on the other side because of the reflex surface of the kidney.
Most patients with kidney stones have no symptoms unless the kidney stones fall from the kidneys into the urethra and block the urine in the urethra. Common symptoms include waist and abdominal cramps, nausea, vomiting, restlessness, abdominal distension, hematuria, etc. If combined with a urinary tract infection, chills and fever may also occur. Subacute renal colic often causes patients unbearable pain.
Sometimes patients feel no pain and only have hematuria or very few blood streaks that cannot be seen by the human eye. Most routine physical examinations include a urine test, and a light microscope is used to examine the residue after filtration in the urine. If an excessive number of red blood cells is seen, it indicates hematuria, and sometimes it is an early warning sign of kidney stones.
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