
Introduction
This information will help you understand your choices, whether you
share in the decision-making process or rely on your doctor's
recommendation.
Key points in making your decision
Kidney stones can be very painful, and people often seek
immediate treatment. Your choice may be between letting the stone exit your
body (pass) on its own and using pain medicine, or breaking up the stone to
speed it along and lessen the pain. Consider the following when making your
decision:
- The size of your stone and its likelihood of passing on its
own help determine the type of treatment. The American Urological Association
(AUA) recommends the following if your stone is not made of cystine or uric
acid, you have not had a stone before, and you are otherwise healthy:1
- If the stone will probably pass and you
can control your pain with medicine, home treatment may be enough. The smaller
a stone is, the more likely it is to pass on its own. About 9 out of every 10
stones smaller than
5 mm (0.2 in.) and about 5 out
of every 10 stones
5 mm (0.2 in.) to
10 mm (0.4 in.) pass on their
own.2 Only 1 or 2 out of every 10 kidney stones need
more than home treatment.2
- If the stone
probably will not pass, talk with your doctor about all your treatment
options.
- If you cannot control your pain with medicine, or if the stone
is blocking the urine flow, your best choice may be ESWL. ESWL may work best
for kidney stones that are still located in the kidney. It may be harder to
break up a stone that has moved into the ureter, although this is still
possible. You have options other than ESWL, but it is the most commonly used
method because it is effective and does not require any surgery.
- You usually do not have ESWL if you are pregnant or have a
bleeding disorder, kidney infection, urinary tract infection, kidney cancer, or
kidneys with abnormal structure or function.
Medical Information
What are kidney stones?
Kidney stones (renal calculi or nephrolithiasis) are
pieces of minerals that form in the kidneys. They form when the normal balance
of water, salts, minerals, and other substances found in your urine changes.
How this balance changes determines the
type of kidney stones you get. Most kidney stones are
calcium-type—they form when the
calcium levels in your urine change.
Kidney stones may remain in the kidney or travel out of the body
through the
urinary
tract
—the tubes that connect the kidney to the bladder (ureters) and lead outside the body (urethra). When traveling through the urinary tract, a
stone may cause no pain or cause great pain and other symptoms. Kidney stones
can cause long-term damage to the urinary tract if they continue to grow in
size or if they block the flow of urine from the kidneys.
What is ESWL?
Extracorporeal shock wave lithotripsy (ESWL) uses
shock waves to break the kidney stone into small pieces that can pass from the
body more easily than one large stone. Stone fragments usually pass within a
few weeks. Depending on the size of the stone, you may need only one treatment.
The larger the stone, the more likely it is that you will need more than one
treatment.
See an illustration of
ESWL
.
ESWL is only one method used to break up kidney stones, but it is
the most commonly used method because it does not require surgery. Other
options include
percutaneous nephrolithotomy or nephrolithotripsy,
ureteroscopy, and
open surgery.
What are the risks of ESWL?
ESWL has few complications. Complications may include:
- Pain caused by the passage of stone
fragments. This is the most common side effect.
- Blocked urine flow
as a result of stone fragments becoming stuck in the urinary tract. The
fragments may then need to be removed with a ureteroscope.
- Urinary
tract infection.
- Bleeding around the outside of the kidney.
What are the risks of not using ESWL to treat kidney stones?
Unless the kidney stone is blocking urine flow or you have a
urinary tract infection, the risks of not using ESWL
or another method to break up the stone are small.
If you need more information, see the topic
Kidney Stones.
Your Information
Your choices are:
The decision about whether to use ESWL takes into account your
personal feelings and the medical facts.
Extracorporeal shock wave lithotripsy (ESWL)
for kidney stones| Reasons to use ESWL | Reasons not to use ESWL |
|---|
- The stone is not passing on its own and
is causing pain that will not go away.
- The stone is completely
blocking the urine flow.
- You have only one working kidney, and your
doctor worries that the stone is affecting that kidney's ability to
function.
- The stone is causing serious bleeding.
- The
stone continues to grow.
- You have had a kidney transplant, and your
doctor worries about damage from a stone.
Are there other reasons you might want to use
ESWL? | - You are pregnant.
- You have a
bleeding disorder.
- You have a kidney infection, urinary tract
infection, or kidney cancer.
- You have kidneys with abnormal
structure or function.
- You may need more than one treatment to
break up a stone. The larger the stone, the more likely it is that you will
need multiple treatments.
- You have a cystine kidney stone, which
does not break up easily.
- You take blood thinners (anticoagulants),
and your medication cannot be stopped to perform the procedure.
Are there other reasons you might not want to use
ESWL? |
These
personal stories may help you make your
decision.
Wise Health Decision
Use this worksheet to help you make your decision. After
completing it, you should have a better idea of how you feel about using ESWL
to treat your kidney stones. Discuss the worksheet with your doctor.
Circle the answer that best applies to you.
| I am tolerating the pain. | Yes | No | Unsure |
| The pain medicine is working well enough that I
can wait for the stone to pass. | Yes | No | Unsure |
| I'm concerned about how long it might take the
stone to pass, based on how large it is. | Yes | No | Unsure |
| I'm concerned about the risks of the ESWL
procedure. | Yes | No | Unsure |
| I'd rather wait and see whether the stone passes
and then reconsider my decision if it's taking too long or causing too much
pain. | Yes | No | Unsure |
| I am concerned about the cost of ESWL. | Yes | No | NA* |
| I am concerned about lost work time. | Yes | No | NA |
*NA = Not applicable
Use the following space to list any other important concerns you
have about this decision.
What is your overall impression?
Your answers in the above worksheet are meant to give you a
general idea of where you stand on this decision. You may have one overriding
reason to use or not use ESWL.
Check the box below that represents your overall impression about
your decision.
Leaning toward using
ESWL | | Leaning toward NOT using
ESWL |
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