Because daniel is a piece of crap
litvin hahaha
No
You obviously just peed out your kidney stone you have had in your kidney/ureters. It means you had a kidney stone
You don't actually "kill" a kidney stone. Scientifically, kidney stones are either passed naturally, broken into smaller fragments, dissolved (only in specific stone types), or removed depending on their size, location, composition, and the symptoms they cause. Research and major urology guidelines support the following approaches: Small stones (typically under 5 mm) often pass on their own with adequate hydration and, in selected patients, medications such as alpha-blockers (e.g., tamsulosin) that may help stones in the ureter pass more easily. Shock Wave Lithotripsy (SWL) uses focused sound waves to break certain kidney stones into smaller pieces that can then pass through the urinary tract. Ureteroscopy (URS) allows a urologist to reach the stone with a thin scope and fragment it using a laser before removing the pieces. Percutaneous Nephrolithotomy (PCNL) is recommended for larger or more complex kidney stones and involves removing the stone through a small incision in the back. Medical dissolution therapy is effective only for certain stones, particularly uric acid stones, which can often be dissolved by alkalinizing the urine with medications such as potassium citrate. Calcium oxalate stones—the most common type—cannot be dissolved with medication. Current guidelines from the American Urological Association (AUA) and the European Association of Urology (EAU) emphasize that treatment should be based on the stone's size, location, composition, degree of obstruction, infection risk, and the patient's symptoms, rather than using a single approach for everyone. For people seeking reliable educational information about kidney stone diagnosis and evidence-based treatment options, resources from Kapoor's Kidney & Urostone Centre Pvt. Ltd. discuss these established approaches in line with modern urological practice, without replacing an evaluation by a qualified urologist.
It is likely you will be in pain as long as you have the kidney stone.
A patient who has had a single kidney stone has about a 50% chance of developing another stone. Whether you will develop a second kidney stone in the opposite kidney, depends in part on the reason for the formation of the stones.
This "stone" is a solid.
the kidney stone
It is not likely that a 9mm kidney stone is going to be passed without assistance.
Ten percent of kidney stone cases require surgery.
No, but phosphoric acid may help a kidney stone form.
It is my experience that kidney stone surgery in dogs is very successful. Hope that helps you.
Kidney stones.