Can You Dissolve Kidney Stones Naturally?

kidneysCurrently there are over 80,000 people on the waiting list for kidney transplants. Unfortunately, chronic kidney disease and kidney failure have become commonplace due, in part, to the increased number of people with diabetes and hypertension. Kidney disease, kidney stones, and cancer of the kidneys are the primary dysfunctions of this organ.

The kidneys are part of the urinary tract. This pair of organs sits on either side of the abdomen and filters toxins from the blood, regulates acid, maintain water balance in the body by excreting urine, and makes a hormone to keep your bones healthy. Kidney disease is referred to as renal disease.

When someone has hypertension, it can damage the blood vessels in the kidneys. These blood vessels are needed as part of the body’s toxin and waste filtering process, so when they’re damaged, the kidneys are unable to eliminate toxins. If the kidneys fail, a temporary solution is dialysis, but a transplant is the only real treatment.

Diabetes causes a similar problem. When the body’s blood sugar levels stay too high, glucose in the blood can act as a poison to the system, and the poison will damage the filtering tubes inside the kidneys, thus making the kidneys unable to filter the toxins and wastes properly.

Kidney stones are generally not a sign of kidney disease. Usually kidney stones indicate a dietary issue–a person is not drinking enough water, ingesting too much salt, or having some type of dietary issue where you’re ingesting too much of something that is causing the formation of a kidney stone. A number of conditions can lead to kidney stones:

Gout results in an increased amount of uric acid in the urine and can lead to the formation of uric acid stones.

Hypercalciuria (high calcium in the urine) is an inherited condition in which too much calcium is absorbed from food and excreted into the urine where it may form calcium phosphate or calcium oxalate stones.

Other conditions associated with an increased risk of kidney stones include hyperparathyroidism, kidney diseases such as renal tubular acidosis, and cystinuria and hyperoxaluria.

People with inflammatory bowel disease or who have had an intestinal bypass or ostomy surgery are also more likely to develop kidney stones.

Some medications also raise the risk of kidney stones. These medications include some diuretics, calcium-containing antacids, and the protease inhibitor Crixivan (indinavir), which is used to treat HIV infection.

Most kidney stones are formed by calcium deposits which aren’t diluted enough to be flushed from the system. When these calcium deposits attach to each other, they become stuck in the narrow ureter tubes which connect the kidneys and the bladder. Stuck together, they cause severe pain and can block the flow of urine.

In about 80 percent of kidney stones, the stone is made of calcium. These can be dissolved in several ways. Obviously, drinking water is essential to keeping your kidneys healthy. Even if you form a stone, drinking water can help flush it out.

Comments

  1. admin says:
  2. Eye Care says:

    I just read that cleaning up your kidneys and liver helps to reduce BO and sweating. I was wondering if there was a connection because I have had a sweat problem for about a year, and a chronic kidney infection since February. I want to know about the kidneys More…

  3. Stephanie from treatment incontinence says:

    Salts take out hydration from the body. That is why people with kidney problems are those who like to eat salty foods. Drinking water is the simplest thing that people can do for their kidney problems or to at least prevent having kidney problems.

    Also, people should just surrender to the nature’s call. I have a lot of friends who can hold their urination for hours! And some of them ended up having some kidney troubles. Worse, if this wrong practice will lead to uncontrollable urination, also called urinary incontinence.

    If you already have this, exercise, proper diet, and taking supplements are helpful to relieve urinary incontinence. Older people usually suffer from this but young ones are not excused. So, let’s just take care of our kidneys before we begin curing them.
    .-= Stephanie @ treatment incontinence´s last blog ..Bladder Control Protection =-.

  4. Kyle says:

    Right, drinking water can help “flush” and dissolve small kidney stones. Here again, prevention is often the best medicine! Don’t wait until you’ve got a stone to try to dissolve it. Make sure you’re drinking enough water (not soda or coffee, but water) per day and keep your kidneys healthy.
    Kyle invites you to read . . . Why I Love FeversMy Profile

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