Dismiss Modal

Diagnosis

Identifying Kidney Stones

Choose a preferred language

There are four general types of kidney stones. Your kidney stone’s size and shape determine whether it's likely to pass by itself. Knowing what a stone is made of (its composition) helps your health care provider find its cause and prescribe the best treatment. X-rays or scans can help show the stone's size and shape. Your provider may also give you a strainer to catch the stone while passing urine. The stone can then be sent to a lab for analysis. You may need other types of urine and blood tests to help identify the stone. These tests can also help find causes for different types of stones. 

The tests can show:

  • Size. A stone may be as small as a grain of sand. Some may be the size of a pebble. A few may be as large as a golf ball. Small stones may pass out of your body when you urinate.

  • Shape. Small, smooth, round stones may pass easily. Jagged-edged stones often lodge inside the kidney or ureter. Staghorn stones can fill the entire renal pelvis and calyces.

  • Composition. Most stones are made of calcium oxalate, a hard compound. Stones made of uric acid or cystine or that are caused by infection (struvite stones), are less dense. Stones often contain more than one chemical.

Closeup of hands pouring urine through strainer into toilet.


Treating your stones

You and your health care provider will work together to form a treatment plan. Your provider may suggest that you let your stone pass naturally. Or you may choose to manage it with medicines. Certain procedures may also help, such as shock wave lithotripsy or using a thin tube with a camera inside the body to remove the stone (ureteroscopy). When they find out the cause of the stone, you will be told how you can help prevent kidney stones in the future.

Featured in

© 2000-2025 The StayWell Company, LLC. All rights reserved. This information is not intended as a substitute for professional medical care. Always follow your healthcare professional's instructions.

Find the right providers for your needs.

CalOptima Health works with thousands of Orange County providers, including doctors, specialists, health networks, medical groups and more.

Find a Doctor

See Member Health Rewards

CalOptima Health offers health rewards to eligible CalOptima Health members who take an active role in their well-being!

View available rewards
Related Articles
Read article
Heart Health
Hemodialysis Discharge

Hemodialysis is a treatment that takes over the essential functions of the kidney until you recover from the kidney disease, or obtain a kidney transplant. If you have end stage renal disease and are not eligible for a transplant, you will need to have hemodialysis for the rest of your life.

Read article
Urology
Renal (Kidney) Insufficiency

When your kidneys don't work as they should, waste products build up in your blood. The early stage of this process is called renal insufficiency. If renal insufficiency gets worse, you can develop chronic renal failure.

Read article
Heart Health
Hemodialysis Access Bleeding

You have a hemodialysis access in your arm, either an arteriovenous (AV) fistula or an artery to vein graft. It has been bleeding. Blood needs to flow freely through the fistula or graft. As part of your treatment, you are also taking medication that thins your blood. This makes you bleed more easily. It is important to stop your fistula or graft from bleeding as soon as possible.

Read article
Urology
How Your Kidneys Work

The kidneys' main job is to clean the blood. They filter wastes and excess fluids from thousands of pints of blood each day. Learn about their other roles as well.