Medications
Medicine you can buy without a
prescription, such as
nonsteroidal anti-inflammatories (NSAIDs), may relieve
your pain. Your doctor can give you stronger pain medicine if needed. NSAIDs
include aspirin and ibuprofen (such as Motrin and Advil).
Your
doctor may prescribe medicine to help your body pass the stone.
Calcium channel blockers and alpha-blockers have been
shown to help kidney stones pass more quickly with very few side
effects.11 Ask your doctor if one of these medicines
can help you.
If you get more
kidney stones despite drinking more fluids and making
changes to your diet, your doctor may give you medicine to help dissolve your
stones or to prevent new ones from forming. You may also receive prescription
medicine if you have a disease that increases your risk of forming kidney
stones. Which medicine you take depends on the
type of stones you have.
Medication Choices
Medicine to prevent calcium stones
About 80% of
kidney stones are
calcium stones.1 Calcium
stones cannot be dissolved by changing your diet or taking medicines. There are
medicines that may keep calcium stones from getting bigger or may prevent new
calcium stones from forming:
- Thiazides (such as hydrochlorothiazide,
chlorthalidone) and
potassium citrate (Urocit-K) are commonly used to
prevent calcium stones.
- Orthophosphate (Neutra-Phos) is sometimes used. It has
more side effects than thiazides or potassium citrate.
Medicine to prevent uric acid stones
About 5% to
10% of kidney stones are made of uric acid, a waste product that normally exits
the body in the urine.1 Uric acid stones can sometimes
be dissolved with medicine.
- Potassium citrate (Urocit-K) and
sodium bicarbonate (baking soda) prevent the urine
from becoming too acidic, which helps prevent uric acid stones.
- Allopurinol (Lopurin, Zyloprim) makes it more
difficult for your body to make uric acid.
Medicine to prevent cystine stones
Less than 1%
of kidney stones are made of a chemical called cystine.1 Cystine stones are more likely to occur in families with a
disease that results in too much cystine in the urine (cystinuria).
- Potassium citrate (Urocit-K) prevents the urine from
becoming too acidic, which helps prevent cystine kidney stones from
forming.
- Penicillamine (Cuprimine, Depen),
tiopronin (Thiola), and
captopril (Capoten) all help keep cystine dissolved in
the urine, which makes cystine-type kidney stones less likely to form.
Medicine to prevent struvite stones
About 10% to
15% of kidney stones are struvite stones.1 They can
also be called infection stones if they occur with kidney or urinary tract
infections (UTIs). These types of kidney stones sometimes are also called
staghorn calculi if they grow large enough.
- Urease inhibitors (Lithostat) are rarely used because
of their side effects and poor results.
What To Think About
If you have uric acid stones
or cystine stones and are taking medicine to prevent more stones from forming,
you will most likely have to continue taking that medicine for the rest of your
life.
Some struvite stones (staghorn calculi) form because of
frequent
kidney infections. If you have a struvite stone, you
will most likely need antibiotics to cure the infection and help prevent new
stones from forming, and you will most likely need surgery to remove the
stone.