Kidney StonesPrevention If you have more than one
kidney stone, especially if you have a family history
of stones, you are more likely to have kidney stones again. But you can take
steps to help prevent them: - Drink more fluids. Try to drink enough water to
keep your urine clear, about 8 to 10 glasses of water per day. Slowly increase
how much you drink, perhaps adding one more glass of water a day until you are
drinking 8 to 10 glasses a day. This slow increase will give your body time to
adjust to the extra fluids. You are drinking enough water when your urine is
clear or light yellow. If it is dark yellow, you are not drinking enough
fluids. If you have kidney, heart, or liver disease and have fluid
restrictions, talk with your doctor before increasing how much you
drink.
- Change your diet. This may be helpful, but it depends on
what is causing your kidney stones. Your doctor may do more tests before
deciding whether changing your diet will help reduce your risk of developing
another stone. The results of these tests may suggest that it could be helpful
to do one or more of the following:
- Increasing how much
fiber you eat. Fiber includes oat bran, beans, whole
wheat breads, wheat cereals, cabbage, and carrots.
- Eating less
beef, pork, and poultry.
- Eating a moderate or high amount of
calcium-rich foods, such as dairy products. Getting your recommended amounts of
calcium, combined with a diet low in sodium and protein, may decrease your risk
of kidney stones.7 In older people and younger women,
one study indicates that eating more calcium-rich foods reduces the risk of
kidney stones.8
- Avoiding foods that are
high in
oxalate, such as dark green vegetables, nuts, and
chocolate.
- Not adding salt when you cook or eat. Try removing the
salt shaker from your table.
For more information on diet and kidney stones, see: Diet to prevent kidney stones
MedicineIf you get more kidney stones despite
drinking more fluids and making changes to your diet, your doctor may give you
medicine to help dissolve your stones or to prevent new ones from forming. You
may also receive medicine if you have a disease that increases your risk of
forming kidney stones. Which medicine you take depends on the
type of stone you may have. Medicine to prevent calcium stonesAbout 80% of
kidney stones are
calcium stones.1 Calcium
stones cannot be dissolved by changing your diet or taking medicines. There are
medicines that may keep calcium stones from getting bigger or may prevent new
calcium stones from forming: Medicine to prevent uric acid stonesAbout 5% to
10% of kidney stones are made of uric acid, a waste product that normally exits
the body in the urine.1 Uric acid stones can sometimes
be dissolved with medicine. Medicine to prevent cystine stonesLess than 1% of
kidney stones are made of a chemical called cystine.1
Cystine stones are more likely to occur in families with a disease that results
in too much cystine in the urine (cystinuria). Medicine to prevent struvite stonesAbout 10% to
15% of kidney stones are struvite stones.1 They can
also be called infection stones if they occur with kidney or urinary tract
infections (UTIs). These types of kidney stones sometimes are also called
staghorn calculi if they grow large enough.
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