Author Topic: Dear forums... Kidney Stones! (Pics!)  (Read 5351 times)

drinking water actually helps, you know
are you talking to me
or just adding onto what I said
or what

are you talking to me
or just adding onto what I said
or what
basically adding onto what you said. he should just stick with water, because soda won't help

basically adding onto what you said. he should just stick with water, because soda won't help
that's, yep. I drink water all the time anyway. everyone should. like the only time I have anything else is when we go out to eat

waters fo bitchiz n bustas

#keepin #it #real

you can get it turned into sand

which wont hurt AS MUCH but it'll still be pissing sand out your snake which will hurt

Passed it, the little forgeter.
Hoo, what a stuffty day... However i will say this: bubble bath + jaccuzi = shortcut

Now who wants proof :D
sarcasm, pls dont ask for proof :|

Not to be picky but doesnt salutE have an E at the end?

Also, the pain meds i have prescribed for when i have stones are super strong, so holding my iphone and typing is like typing with your arms numb and the screen an inch away from your eyeballs: i can hardly see my words lol

french

I might upload the pic tomorrow (im supposed to save stones for medical brown townysis / because my parents think its hilarious how relieved i am after i pass one so its like a war trophy), its nothing gorey, but for now since I certainly won't be sleeping for the next half an hour after THAT, heres my favorite kidney stone related story:

Late october of 2009, I was scheduled for my first kidney surgery at Duke Children's hospital, from one of the world's greatest kidney surgeons (great guy, good sense of humor, caring and very understanding). I had to go in at 6am, aka the early shoft for them. i would be the first in and out of the operation room that day. The day before they had marked where they wanted to stick the IV in my arm, and gave me some numbing cream to apply 2 hours before putting it in. They prepped me for surgery, and then i dont recall anything else.
I woke up about... Eh, 11:00 (that's about 6 hours later, surgery only lasts 1.5 hours). I couldnt really open my eyes, so i ended up dozing off several times, until i finally was wide awake. I noticed three things immediately: my face had some nasty goo on it making it impossible to open my eyes almost; My entire arm that originally had the needle in it was COVERED in dried blood;... And there was a long tube moving from below the bed, to under my sheets.
This is where I explain those 3 things. Mid-surgery, my anesthesia wore off, and I apparently decided 'doing a backflip off the table sounds like a good idea!' This of course freaked EVERYONE out, but im no jerk, so my half-dead brain somehow sat me up on the operation table again while the surgeons all stood frozen. Now, this clearly caused for those 3 things mentioned before; my IV fell out, ao they tried reapplying it on the same arm, and managed to blow up 4 veins. So they tried the other arm, blew up 3 and FINALLY got it. Then they doubled my anesthesia and put the goop on my eyes (still not sure why)...
The tube mentioned before... Is called a catheter. I like to think of it as 'surgeon's payback'. Allow me to assist you in realizing the horror of it: http://www.google.com/search?q=catheter&hl=en&tbo=d&source=lnms&tbm=isch&sa=X&ei=zS6TUNG-OIvs8gSJ2ICoBQ&ved=0CAgQ_AUoAQ&biw=320&bih=416#i=30
At the very end of that tube is a balloon. No, not a party balloon, as that would imply they had a sense of humor. The balloon end goes in your bladder and inflates to stay in place. Theres an opening just below that, which allows urine to empty into the bag on the OTHER end. This made it so if I moved the slightest muscle, my 'disco stick' became the center of hell, painpainpainPAIN. The first surgery, they decided, since I'm such a well endowed young man, I deserved the LARGEST size they had! Yippee! Atleast, yippee until they YANKED IT OUT, the only advice being; hold your breath and slowly let it out, its okay if you have to cry or scream...
The second time, just to be real starfishs, they gave me the 'take home' version and let me remove it. That took much longer and involved me deciding to sleep for the rest of the day.

So, to this day, they give me a little extra anesthesia, and we have ruled out catheters.  FOREVER. or so help me god I will end this world

Guys I don't actually have bladderstones it was something else

oh dear god i thought itd be like
"oh kidney stone hehe just gonna pee
ow ow
ok done yesss"
but noW WUWUGUGawfgse

apparently passing it is equal to the pain of childbirth lol
Does passing happen in your piss
you can get it turned into sand
which wont hurt AS MUCH but it'll still be pissing sand out your snake which will hurt
To Ben: I've only had it occur through urination, but I feel like someday Im gonna meet a nice girl, get some great head, and shes gonna spit a rock out and look at me like I'm a freek :s haaaaa get it, cus... Freek... And... Ha...
To Dez: passing the stone itself, in my opinion, is nothing compared to carrying it. Imagine a constant chinese-chainsaw, and being punched in whichever kidney the stone is in by hulk hogan.

I spent half my day trying to distract myself from the pain via rolling around in my bed from one side to the other, for a good 2 hours
Also to Dez (2nd post): sorry bud, but that's actually a surgery for me. They use soundwaves to pummel the stone into gravel, but they can't do it from outside my skin: my stones are called cystine stones. They're made up of excess protein, which comes from literally every organ in your body. slight exaggeration That said, to 'pummel' my stones with those sound waves, they literally have to stick a wire-like appendage in through my back, into my kidney, and blast them point blank with Static-X's Destroyer, then vacuum it all up with a dyson. Because that stuff can fit ANYWHERE.
I actually have a test tube from a surgery lile that, I can post a picture of that tomorrow as well.
« Last Edit: November 01, 2012, 10:46:27 PM by koonta »


after reading what was on this page i have now come to the conclusion that if i ever have a kidney stone i will jump off a building