Surgery
People rarely need
open surgery to treat
kidney stones. In most cases, other less invasive
treatments are successful. You may need open surgery when the kidney stone is
causing severe bleeding that cannot be controlled. In this case, the surgeon
makes a cut in your side or stomach to reach the kidneys, and he or she removes
the stone.
Another type of surgery,
percutaneous nephrolithotomy or nephrolithotripsy, is
also used. The surgeon puts a narrow telescope into your kidney through small
cuts in your back. He or she then removes (lithotomy) or breaks up and removes
(lithotripsy) the stone. This surgery may be used if other procedures do not
work or if you have a very large stone. See a picture of
nephrolithotomy
.
In rare cases, a person forms kidney stones because the
parathyroid glands
produce too much of a hormone,
which leads to higher calcium levels and possibly calcium-type kidney stones.
To help prevent stones from coming back, your doctor may suggest surgery to
remove a parathyroid gland or glands (parathyroidectomy).