JON MARKS, MD: Frequently patients with stones that size don't feel pain. They have urinary infection. They may have blood in the urine detected microscopically. Those are somewhat less symptomatic stones. Unfortunately, those are the stones that can have the most devastating effect on the kidney because they are in some sense silent.
PAUL MONIZ: Dr. Salant, let's bring you into this, more on the pain in just a moment. When do stones usually strike?
ROBERT SALANT, MD: The most common onset of stones is in a male patient, and it's probably a 2:1 or 3:1 ratio of male to female. The typical age of onset is somewhere between 30 and 50 years. However, stones can occur in children as young as 8 and 9 with metabolic abnormalities, and can also occur in the elderly for the first time.
PAUL MONIZ: Let's talk, Dr. Marks, about the pain. Why are the stones so painful?
JON MARKS, MD: A stone sitting innocently in the kidney frequently is not painful. But as the stones move about the kidney and in particular when they descend down the ureter, as I illustrated earlier, they create inflammation, they create local swelling. That causes, in a sense, a backup of urine behind the stone. It's that backup of urine that by and large is responsible for the pain the patients feel.
PAUL MONIZ: Very good information. Dr. Robert Salant, thank you for your time. Dr. Jon Marks, for your time as well. I'm Paul Moniz. Thank you for joining us. Remember that kidney stones are common, affecting about 10 percent of the American population at one point or another. Thanks for being with us.