Introduction & Risk Factors - Stone Genesis Saga
- Urinary calculi: Solid crystalline concretions in urinary tract (kidney, ureter, bladder).
- Epidemiology: India's "stone belt" (NW states); Peak 20-50 yrs; M:F ≈ 3:1.
- Risk Factors:
- ↓Fluid intake (key preventable factor)
- Diet: ↑Oxalate, ↑Na, ↑Animal protein
- Metabolic: Hypercalciuria, hyperuricosuria, hypocitraturia, hyperoxaluria
- Anatomical: PUJO, horseshoe kidney, medullary sponge kidney
- Genetic: Cystinuria, RTA Type 1, primary hyperoxaluria
- Medications: Triamterene, indinavir, topiramate

⭐ Most common cause of hypercalciuria is idiopathic hypercalciuria.
Types of Calculi - Crystal ID Parade
| Stone Type | Composition | Radiopacity | Urine pH | Crystal Morphology (Microscopy) | Key Associations/Causes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ca Oxalate | CaOx (Mono/Di-hydrate) | Radio-opaque | Acidic/Neutral | Envelope (dihydrate), Dumbbell (monohydrate) | Most common (~75-80%); hypercalciuria, hyperoxaluria |
| Ca Phosphate | Ca Phosphate (Apatite/Brushite) | Radio-opaque | Alkaline | Amorphous; Prisms/Rosettes (Brushite) | RTA type 1, hyperparathyroidism |
| Struvite | $MgNH_4PO_4 \cdot 6H_2O$ | Radio-opaque | Alkaline | Coffin-lid | Infection (Proteus, Klebsiella); staghorn |
| Uric Acid | Uric Acid | Radiolucent | Acidic | Rhomboid, Rosette | Gout, ↑purine, myeloproliferative disorders |
| Cystine | Cystine | Faintly opaque | Acidic | Hexagonal (pathognomonic) | Rare, genetic (cystinuria) |
- 📌 Mnemonic (Radiolucent stones): Uric Acid, Xanthine, Indinavir (UXI). (Xanthine & Indinavir are rare).
⭐ Struvite stones are associated with urea-splitting organisms like Proteus and can form large staghorn calculi.
Clinical Features - Colic & Clues
- Renal/Ureteric Colic:
- Loin pain radiating: groin, tip of penis, labia.
- Severe, colicky.
- Associated Symptoms:
- Hematuria (microscopic/macroscopic).
- Nausea/Vomiting.
- Dysuria, urgency, frequency.
- Bladder Stones: Irritative voiding, intermittent stream.
- Signs:
- Costovertebral angle (CVA) tenderness.
- Abdominal tenderness.
- Systemic: fever, chills (if infection).
- Silent Stones: Incidental finding.

⭐ The character of pain in renal colic is typically crescendo-decrescendo, and patients are often restless (unable to find a comfortable position).
Diagnosis - Spotting the Stones
- Initial Clues:
- Hx, Exam.
- Urine: Hematuria, pyuria, crystals, pH.
- Blood: CBC (↑WBC), RFT, electrolytes, S.Ca, S.Uric acid.
- Imaging - Visualizing Stones:
- X-ray KUB: Radio-opaque stones (CaOx, Struvite).
- USG KUB: Hydronephrosis, stones (kidney, prox. ureter, VUJ). Initial choice, esp. pregnancy/children.
- NCCT KUB: Gold Standard. Detects most stones (not pure Indinavir), size, location, HU, obstruction.
⭐ NCCT KUB is the gold standard for detecting urinary calculi.
- IVU: Historical; anatomy & function.
- Metabolic Workup:
- Recurrent/high-risk: 24-hr urine (Ca, Oxalate, Citrate, Uric acid, Na, Volume, Cr).

Management & Prevention - Shatter & Shield
- Conservative: Hydration (>2.5L/day urine), Analgesia, watchful wait (stones <5mm).
- MET: Distal ureteric stones 5-10mm. Tamsulosin 0.4mg OD.
- Surgical (Indications: severe pain, obstruction/infection, RF, large/unsuitable stones):
- ESWL: Renal <2cm, upper ureter <1cm. CI: pregnancy, bleeding, UTI.
- URS: Mid/distal ureteric. Renal if ESWL/PCNL unsuitable.
- PCNL: Renal >2cm, staghorn, lower pole >1.5cm, failed ESWL/URS.
- Open/Lap/Robotic: Rare; complex, failed MIS.
- Prevention: Diet (by stone type), ↑fluid intake. Meds: Thiazides (hypercalciuria), Allopurinol (hyperuricosuria), K-Citrate (hypocitraturia/uric acid).
⭐ For large renal stones (>2 cm) or staghorn calculi, Percutaneous Nephrolithotomy (PCNL) is generally the first-line treatment.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Calcium oxalate stones are most common; often envelope-shaped crystals.
- Struvite stones (MAP) are linked to UTIs by urease-producing bacteria (e.g., Proteus); can form staghorn calculi.
- Uric acid stones are radiolucent on X-ray; treat with urine alkalinization (e.g., potassium citrate).
- Cystine stones indicate cystinuria (autosomal recessive); hexagonal crystals pathognomonic.
- Non-Contrast CT (NCCT) KUB is the gold standard for diagnosing most urinary calculi_
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