Renal colic

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Quick Overview

Renal colic is acute flank pain caused by urinary tract stones (nephrolithiasis/urolithiasis). Affects ~10-15% of adults; recurrence rate 50% within 5-10 years. Critical to distinguish simple colic from complicated presentations requiring urgent intervention (obstruction with infection, AKI, bilateral obstruction). NICE CG118 provides evidence-based pathways for diagnosis and management.

Core Facts & Concepts

Stone Types & Composition

  • Calcium oxalate (75-80%) - most common, radio-opaque
  • Uric acid (5-10%) - radiolucent on plain X-ray
  • Struvite (10-15%) - infection stones (Proteus), staghorn calculi
  • Cystine (<1%) - genetic, hexagonal crystals

Clinical Presentation

  • 🚩 Classic triad: Colicky flank pain radiating to groin + haematuria + nausea/vomiting
  • Pain severity: 10/10, restless patient (vs peritonitis = still)
  • Location predicts stone position: loin (renal pelvis), iliac fossa (mid-ureter), suprapubic (vesicoureteric junction)

Figure 1: CT KUB showing radio-opaque calculus in proximal right ureter with proximal hydronephrosis

Imaging Gold Standard

  • Non-contrast CT KUB - sensitivity 95-98%, specificity 96-100% (NICE CG118)
  • Shows stone size, location, degree of obstruction (hydronephrosis)
  • Ultrasound - alternative in pregnancy, children; detects hydronephrosis but misses small stones

Stone Size Predicts Passage

Stone SizeSpontaneous Passage RateTimeframe
<5mm90%4 weeks
5-7mm50%Variable
>7mm10%Unlikely - needs intervention

Problem-Solving Approach

1. Immediate Analgesia (NICE CG118)

  • First-line: NSAIDs (diclofenac 50mg PO/100mg PR) - superior to opiates, reduces ureteric spasm
  • Second-line: Opiates (morphine IV/SC) if NSAIDs contraindicated (AKI, bleeding risk)
  • Anti-emetics: Metoclopramide 10mg IV/IM

2. Urgent Urology Referral Indications 🚩

  • Obstructed infected kidney (sepsis + hydronephrosis) - emergency nephrostomy/stent
  • AKI (Cr >150 or rising) with bilateral obstruction or solitary kidney
  • Uncontrolled pain despite adequate analgesia
  • Persistent vomiting preventing oral intake

Figure 2: Ultrasound showing moderate hydronephrosis with dilated renal pelvis and calyces

3. Conservative vs Interventional Management

  • Conservative (Medical Expulsive Therapy):

    • Stones <10mm, no infection, controlled pain
    • Alpha-blocker (tamsulosin 400mcg OD) - increases passage rate for 5-10mm stones
    • Adequate hydration (2-3L/day), analgesia, 4-6 week trial
  • Interventional:

    • Extracorporeal Shock Wave Lithotripsy (ESWL) - stones <20mm, renal/upper ureter
    • Ureteroscopy + laser lithotripsy - stones >15mm or failed ESWL
    • Percutaneous nephrolithotomy (PCNL) - large/staghorn calculi >20mm

4. Exclude Infection

  • Urinalysis + culture (leucocytes, nitrites)
  • Blood cultures if septic
  • Obstructive pyelonephritis = urological emergency (mortality 20-40% if delayed)

Analysis Framework

Differential Diagnosis of Acute Flank Pain

DiagnosisKey DiscriminatorInvestigation
Renal colicColicky, radiates to groin, haematuriaCT KUB: stone visible
PyelonephritisFever, dysuria, CVA tendernessUrine culture positive
AAAPulsatile mass, >50yrs, smokerUrgent CT angiogram
MusculoskeletalPositional, tender paraspinal musclesClinical diagnosis
Ovarian pathologyFemale, lower abdomen, menstrual historyPelvic USS

Red Flags Requiring Immediate Action 🚩

  • Fever + obstructed kidney = sepsis risk
  • Bilateral obstruction = AKI risk
  • Solitary kidney = renal failure risk
  • Anuria >12 hours = complete obstruction

Visual Aid

NICE CG118 Management Pathway

Clinical ScenarioActionTimeframe
Uncomplicated <10mmConservative + tamsulosinReview 4-6 weeks
10-20mm renal/upper ureterESWLElective
>20mm or staghornPCNLElective
Infected obstructed kidneyNephrostomy/stent + antibiotics<6 hours

Key Points Summary

Analgesia first: NSAIDs (diclofenac) superior to opiates for renal colic pain relief

CT KUB non-contrast = gold standard imaging (95-98% sensitivity); USS alternative in pregnancy

90% of stones <5mm pass spontaneously within 4 weeks; >7mm unlikely without intervention

Urgent urology referral: Obstructed infected kidney (sepsis), AKI with obstruction, uncontrolled pain

Medical Expulsive Therapy: Tamsulosin 400mcg OD for 5-10mm stones increases passage rate

Emergency nephrostomy/stent required for obstructive pyelonephritis within 6 hours (mortality risk)

Stone composition matters: Calcium oxalate (radio-opaque, 75%), uric acid (radiolucent, needs CT)

⚠️ Warning: Never discharge febrile patient with hydronephrosis without urology review - obstructive pyelonephritis has 20-40% mortality if untreated

Practice Questions: Renal colic

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Flashcards: Renal colic

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