Guest guest Posted November 19, 1999 Report Share Posted November 19, 1999 >Thanks, Lori, for the VERY interesting article about the liver-kidney >transplant. Earlier, I posted my questions about association between liver and kidney disease and it gave me chills when I read the article after I'd posted. I've been checked for kidney problems over and over for more than 25 years but no one has ever pinpointed a problem. They've found excess protein in my urine and I've had repeated urinary tract infections. In 1989 I had an attack of what my doctor suspected was kidney stone pain but like a dummy, I declined an ultrasound. In 1991 I developed severe pain in my left side at the waist (not in my back). We were living in Europe and there was a bit of a communication gap between me and the first doctor I saw. He said the pain was probably caused by a spinal disc reduction and sent me to a physio-therapist, who kind of pummelled my back hoping to reduce muscle spasm. It just made it worse and the therapist was concerned so he stopped the treatment and told the doctor he was afraid he was causing more harm than good. I lived with the pain for almost another year, then during my routine annual gynecological exam, my doctor found considerable blood in my urine. Amazing that I'd never noticed. The 1-1/2 cm (about 3/4 " in diameter) stone that was detected was so large the technician was shocked that I'd managed to develop a kidney stone that big without it being detected. He said that he'd never seen one so enormous. I had lithotripsy, which in Switzerland is like something Dr. Mengeles might have dreamt up, and it didn't touch the stone but I thought it was going to kill me since they didn't give me anesthetic until I was ready to pass out from pain. In 1993 I had it done again in Portland, Oregon. The fragments were examined and I was told it was an oxylite stone, the hardest kind. It took 3 weeks to pass the fragments through a stent and I developed a latex allergy so that the stent also became a problem. From then on, right up until 1997 just before I was diagnosed with AIH, there was always blood in my urine. However, ultrasounds and IVPs and repeated analysis could never find the cause. After AIH was diagnosed, possible kidney problems became low priority and I've only had 3 urinalysis since November 1997. As usual, one of the urinalysis detected a urinary tract infection of indeterminate cause. I didn't even know I had a problem. I felt nothing unusual. Apparently there are different types of kidney stones. Oxylite stones are the hardest but I don't know if they are the most unusual. I was told in 1993 that I would almost surely develop more stones. The pain in my left side never went away, even after the lithotripsy, but for the past year and a half it's moved to my upper left side just under my rib cage though sometimes it still hurts at my waist. On the 8th. of November I had another ultrasound and they still don't detect new stones. But, apparently because of the pain, my Internist is now sending me to an Urologist who I'll see in two weeks. I don't for a minute think that I have anything like the man who had the liver-kidney transplant, but I DO develop oxylite stones and apparently my body produces massive quantities of oxylite. This points out once more that it is so important for each of us to be persistent with our doctors and to do all we can to find a physician who wants answers and doesn't just shrug off anything he or she can't understand or diagnose. I am so grateful I have a doctor now who obviously isn't going to stop looking for answers until he has them. If we have a pain in a specific location that doesn't go away, the fact that the cause can't be determined doesn't mean that the pain is in our heads. It just means that the cause can't be readily determined. I'm really grateful for the article and I'll pass it on to the new Urologist for his consideration. It might give him someplace to start in a direction he might not have followed. Take care, Geri > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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