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Kidney Stones and Obstructive Uropathy

Kidney Stones and Obstructive Uropathy

Kidney Stones and Obstructive Uropathy

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Kidney Stones: Types & Risks - Stone Cold Facts

  • Types & Radiopacity:

    • Calcium Oxalate (≈80%): Radiopaque. Risks: ↓Fluids, ↑Oxalate/Na/Animal protein, hypercalciuria, hypocitraturia.
    • Struvite (MAP) (≈10-15%): Staghorn, radiopaque. Risks: UTI (urease+ (Proteus)), alkaline urine.
    • Uric Acid (≈5-10%): Radiolucent. Risks: Gout, acidic urine, ↑purines.
    • Cystine (≈1-2%): Faintly radiopaque. Risks: Cystinuria, acidic urine.
  • Major Risk Factors:

    • ↓ Fluid intake (primary).
    • Diet: ↑Oxalate, ↑Sodium, ↑Animal protein.
    • Family Hx, metabolic (e.g., hyperpara).

⭐ Most common kidney stones are Calcium Oxalate (≈80%); key dietary risk factor is low fluid intake & high oxalate/sodium/animal protein diet.

Risk Factors for Kidney Stones

Kidney Stones: Clinical Picture & Diagnosis - Symptom & Scan

  • Symptoms (Clinical Picture):
    • Renal Colic: Severe, acute, intermittent flank pain.
      • Radiation: "Loin to groin", testes/labia.
    • Hematuria: Gross or microscopic; common (~90%).
    • Nausea/Vomiting: Common.
    • Irritative Voiding: Dysuria, urgency, frequency (stone at VUJ/bladder).
    • Fever/Chills: Suspect infection (obstructive pyelonephritis = emergency!).
  • Diagnosis (Investigations & Scans):
    • Urinalysis: Hematuria, pyuria, crystals, pH.
    • Imaging:
      • USG KUB: First-line in pregnancy & children. Detects hydronephrosis, stones.
      • X-ray KUB: Shows radio-opaque stones (Calcium, Struvite). Limited for small/lucent stones.
      • ⭐ > Non-contrast CT (NCCT) KUB is the gold standard. Highly sensitive for most stones (except pure indinavir). Details size, location, density (HU). Ultrasound of right kidney with hydronephrosis

Kidney Stones: Management Strategies - Crush & Conquer

  • Conservative:
    • Analgesia (NSAIDs), Hydration (>2.5L/day).
    • Medical Expulsive Therapy (MET): For stones <10mm (e.g., Tamsulosin 0.4mg).
  • Interventions (Size/Symptom-Driven):
    • ESWL: Renal stones <2cm, proximal ureteric <1cm.
    • URS: Ureteric stones, smaller renal stones; laser lithotripsy.
    • PCNL: Large stones >2cm, staghorn, complex, lower pole.
    • Open surgery: Rare.
  • Specific Stone Management:
    • Uric Acid: Allopurinol, K-citrate (urine pH 6.5-7.0).
    • Struvite: Antibiotics, complete removal (often PCNL).
    • Cystine: ↑Fluids, D-penicillamine/Tiopronin, K-citrate (urine pH >7.5).

⭐ For stones <10mm likely to pass, Medical Expulsive Therapy (MET) with alpha-blockers (e.g., Tamsulosin) is often used. Stones >2cm or complex staghorn calculi often require PCNL.

Ureteroscopy with laser lithotripsy

Obstructive Uropathy: Causes, Effects & Fixes - Flow Failures

Blockage to urine flow from calyces to urethra.

  • Causes:
    • Intrinsic: Stones, tumors, strictures, BPH.
    • Extrinsic: Retroperitoneal fibrosis, external tumors, pregnancy.
    • Functional: Neurogenic bladder.
  • Effects:
    • ↑ Pressure → hydroureter/hydronephrosis.
    • Prolonged: Tubular damage, fibrosis, ↓ GFR, atrophy.
    • Complications: AKI, CKD, infection.
  • Features: Pain (flank/suprapubic), anuria/oliguria, voiding issues.
  • Diagnosis: Ultrasound (hydronephrosis), CT (level/cause), RFTs.
  • Fixes: Relieve obstruction (catheter, PCN, stent), treat cause.

⭐ In elderly males, Benign Prostatic Hyperplasia (BPH) is the most common cause of bilateral hydronephrosis and post-renal acute kidney injury.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Calcium oxalate: Most common kidney stone type.
  • Struvite stones: Associated with UTIs (Proteus); form staghorn calculi.
  • Uric acid stones: Radiolucent; manage with urine alkalinization.
  • Cystine stones: Hexagonal crystals, genetic (autosomal recessive).
  • Renal colic investigation: NCCT KUB is the investigation of choice.
  • Obstructive uropathy: Leads to hydronephrosis and post-renal AKI.
  • BPH: Common cause of bilateral urinary obstruction in older men.

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A patient presents with hypertension and has a history of renal stones, along with several episodes of renal colic. Which diuretic is the most appropriate to use?

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Kidney Stones and Obstructive Uropathy – NEET-PG Internal Medicine Notes | Oncourse