Common causes of kidney pain are mainly urinary tract infections, kidney infections, and kidney stones. However, there are many other causes of kidney pain, including penetrating and blunt trauma that can result in a “lacerated kidney.” If a woman is pregnant and has kidney pain, she should contact her doctor.
Kidney pain definition and facts
- The function and purpose of the kidneys are to remove excess fluid and waste products from the body.
- The kidneys are organs that are located in the upper abdominal area against the back muscles on both the left and right side of the body.
- Kidney pain and back pain can be difficult to distinguish, but kidney pain is usually deeper and higher in the and back located under the ribs while the muscle pain with common back injury tends to be lower in the back.
- Common causes of kidney pain are mainly urinary tract infections, kidney infections, and kidney stones. However, there are many other causes of kidney pain, including penetrating and blunt trauma that can result in a “lacerated kidney.”
- If a woman is pregnant and has kidney pain, she should contact her doctor.
- Symptoms of kidney pain may include
- fever,
- painful urination,
- flank pain,
- nausea,
- vomiting.
- Kidney pain can be on the left, right, or both sides.
- Causes of kidney pain are diagnosed with the patient’s history, physical examination, and lab tests, including blood, pregnancy, and urine tests. A CT scan or MRI of the abdomen and pelvis may be ordered.
- Treatment for the cause of kidney pain depends upon the underlying cause, Antibiotics are usually required if the underlying cause is bacterial infection.
- Some people can pass a kidney stone spontaneously that resolves kidney pain; however, other people may need surgery.
- Kidney pain can be prevented by avoiding those situations that are the underlying causes of kidney infection and/or kidney damage.
- The prognosis for someone with kidney pain depends upon the cause, and the majority of patients can have a good outcome when treated quickly and appropriately.
Kidney Stone Symptoms
Kidney stones form within the kidney or urinary tract. Kidney stones that do not produce symptoms are called “silent” stones. When symptoms do occur, they usually come on suddenly and include excruciating cramping pain in the low back and/or abdomen, side, or groin. Changing body positions does not relive the pain.