What are the kidney numbers?
kidneys are hard particles that develop in the kidneys when the substances make of urine and connect together. The number of kidneys is usually small enough to pass painlessly through the urinary tract, but sometimes the numbers of the kidneys are sufficiently large to cause serious pain when leaving the urinary system. Sometimes the number of kidneys becomes so large that it is distributed apart, using sound waves or surgical tools to facilitate the passage. Based on its composition, the numbers of kidneys can be classified into one of four types. Other names for kidney numbers are kidney stones, stones or kidney lithiasis. These particles often go unnoticed by the kidney and the urinary tract and do not cause any pain. Sometimes these collided substances can become a core around which more kidneys are formed. When the nucleus collects other caused subverses and aggregates them together, the result is a larger stone. These bulky kidney numbers are extremely painful to go through.
Four types of these stones that can form in the body are stones-oxalate stones, strip stones, uric acid stones and cystin stones. Calcium-oxalate stones, the most common type, are produced when too much calcium or vitamin D is used or due to some drugs, kidney disease or may be related to genetic predisposition. Struit stones often develop after kidney infection or are the result of genetic predisposition. Uric acid stones are formed from excessive amounts of uric acid and are usually caused by excessive red meat consumption. Cystin stones are caused by a inherited disease called cystinuria.
The development of kidney numbers is most common in white men aged 40 who had previously had stones. Large kidney stones cause extral pain on the lower back and down on the front of the body into the area of the weakness and also causes bloody, cloudy or smelly urine, vomiting, feverku and chills and during urination. Most of the stones are treated with religion of pain through the urinary tract during the painful passage of kidneys. Large stones are sometimes divided into multiple passage sizes using sound waves, which is a procedure known as the extracorporeal shock wave of lithotrips. If the therapy of sound waves fails, large stones are sometimes removed by surgery or using a scope passing through the urethra and especially equipped with a stone breaking tool into smaller pieces.