Bladder Stone Symptoms & Treatment

Prostate Treatment in Indore

Bladder Stone Treatment in Indore

Patients often describe a bladder stone in deceptively mild terms, ‘a bit of pain when I pass urine’, ‘I keep wanting to go but nothing comes out’,’my stream keeps stopping and starting’. Such mild descriptions can mask a condition that, if left untreated, can lead to increasing amounts of pain, recurring infections, and progressive bladder damage. Bladder stones form and grow directly inside the bladder itself, usually where urine is not being completely emptied with each void, as opposed to kidney stones which form inside the kidney and may migrate.

Bladder stones occur less frequently than kidney stones in most populations but are nevertheless an important cause of lower urinary tract symptoms, particularly in men with bladder outlet obstruction due to BPH, in patients with neurogenic bladder, and in children in some regions where dietary and nutritional factors contribute to a distinctive pattern of paediatric bladder stone disease . Whatever the cause, the underlying cause for incomplete bladder emptying or urinary stasis must be identified and treated along with removal of the stone itself, otherwise recurrence is likely.

What Is a Bladder Stone?

A bladder stone (vesical calculus) is a hard mass of crystallised minerals that forms inside the urinary bladder. Bladder stones are generally classified as primary (forming de novo in the bladder, usually without any prior history of kidney stones) or secondary (a kidney stone that has travelled down the ureter into the bladder and continued to grow, or stones forming around a foreign body such as a long-term catheter, suture material or mesh from a surgical procedure).

Urinary stasis, urine that stays in the bladder for long periods because the bladder is not emptying completely, is the basic mechanism for most primary bladder stones. Stagnant urine can lead to concentration of minerals in the urine and formation of crystals which may aggregate and grow over time to form a stone. The most common underlying cause of urinary stasis in adult men is bladder outlet obstruction from BPH, the enlarged prostate prevents complete bladder emptying, leaving residual urine in which stones can form and grow, sometimes reaching several centimetres in diameter and taking on the shape of the bladder cavity itself. Bladder stones can be single or multiple, and vary in size from a few millimetres to several centimetres, the largest reported bladder stones have weighed several hundred grams.

What Causes Bladder Stones & Who Is at Risk?

The most common cause of bladder stones in adult men is bladder outlet obstruction. Incomplete bladder emptying caused by BPH results in the urinary stasis in which stones form. The size of the stones is often proportional to the length and severity of the untreated obstruction. Another important risk factor is neurogenic bladder secondary to spinal cord injury, multiple sclerosis, spina bifida or other neurological conditions affecting bladder emptying. This is particularly relevant in patients managed with long term catheterisation, which can itself act as a nidus for stone formation through encrustation. Bladder diverticula are outpouchings of the bladder wall where urine can become trapped and stagnant and are a recognised site of stone formation. Foreign bodies within the bladder, including long-term indwelling catheters, surgical sutures or mesh from previous pelvic surgery and (rarely) self-inserted objects, provide a surface for mineral deposition and stone growth . Recurrent urinary tract infections with urease producing bacteria (the same mechanism as struvite kidney stones) can also promote bladder stone formation especially in patients with chronic catheterisation. Dietary and nutritional factors, particularly low fluid intake, low protein intake in childhood and high oxalate or phosphate diets, are important in the unique pattern of paediatric bladder stones seen in some areas. Men are affected far more often than women, in line with the much higher prevalence of bladder outlet obstruction (BPH) in men.

Symptoms of Bladder Stone You Should Not Ignore

Bladder stones have symptoms that overlap considerably with other lower urinary tract disorders, UTI, BPH, and overactive bladder, which may delay diagnosis . The main feature that should alert you to the possibility of a bladder stone is pain or symptoms that change with body position or physical activity. This is because the stone moves in the bladder.

Pain in Lower Abdomen or Pelvis (Suprapubic Pain)

  • Dull or sharp pain in the lower abdomen above the pubic bone, which often increases as the bladder fills with urine.
  • Pain may radiate to the tip of the penis, perineum or scrotum in men due to referred sensation from bladder wall irritation.
  • Imaging of the bladder in any adult presenting with suprapubic pain and urinary symptoms should be performed to exclude a stone.

Blood in Urine (Haematuria)

  • Blood in the urine, either visible or microscopic, due to direct mechanical irritation of the bladder wall by the surface of the stone.
  • The bladder stone often causes maximal haematuria at the end of micturition when the bladder contracts around the stone.
  • Any haematuria should be investigated including cystoscopy to exclude bladder cancer and to confirm stone diagnosis.

Frequent Urge to Urinate With Little Output

  • The stone irritates the trigone of the bladder and the patient always has the feeling of urgency even if only a little urine is in the bladder.
  • Classic presentation of bladder stone disease includes frequent small-volume urination during the day and night.
  • This symptom pattern is often associated with and difficult to distinguish from overactive bladder without imaging.

Burning or Pain During Urination (Dysuria)

  • Burning on urination, often worse at the end of the act as the stone moves towards the bladder neck.
  • Dysuria from a bladder stone is often associated with secondary infection because of the stagnant urine and stone surfaces which promote bacterial growth.
  • Persistent dysuria resistant to antibiotics should lead to bladder imaging rather than repeated antibiotic courses.

Interrupted or Stop-Start Urine Stream

  • When the patient is voiding, the stone may intermittently block the bladder neck, causing the stream to suddenly stop and then start again with a change in position.
  • Patients often report having to change positions, shift their weight, or lean forward to get the stream started again.
  • The variation in the site of stream interruption is a useful diagnostic sign of a mobile bladder stone.

Pain That Worsens With Movement or Physical Activity

  • Pain aggravated by walking, running or any sudden movement , due to mechanical contact of the stone with the wall of the bladder during movement.
  • Pain that gets a lot better when you rest or lie still, unlike the constant pain that many other pelvic conditions cause.
  • This pattern of pain with activity as well as urinary symptoms should prompt an evaluation for bladder stones.

Recurrent Urinary Tract Infections

  • Bladder stones provide a protected nidus for bacterial colonisation from the normal flushing action of urine flow.
  • Recurrent UTIs that resolve with antibiotics but recur repeatedly, particularly in men where UTI is otherwise uncommon, should prompt bladder imaging.
  • UTIs related to stones are often resistant to antibiotics alone until the stone is removed.

Cloudy or Foul-Smelling Urine

  • Bacteriuria, pyuria (white cells), and stone debris in the bladder are responsible for cloudy, turbid or foetid urine.
  • Cloudy urine despite antibiotic therapy for presumed infection should raise suspicion of an underlying bladder stone.
  • This symptom in the presence of any of the above makes prompt urological imaging more compelling.

How Is Bladder Stone Diagnosed in Indore?

Diagnosis of bladder stone is based on imaging to confirm presence, size and number of the stone, combined with assessment of the underlying cause, especially bladder outlet function, that led to formation of the stone. The main investigations are summarised in the table below:

Investigation

What It Shows

Role in Bladder Stone Diagnosis

Ultrasound KUB

Echogenic mass with acoustic shadow in bladder; post-void residual

First-line; identifies stone, size, and any obstruction causing stasis

Urine Routine & Culture

Blood, leucocytes, bacteria, crystals

Detects associated infection and haematuria; guides antibiotic choice

X-ray KUB (Plain Film)

Radio-opaque stones visible (calcium-based)

Useful for calcium stones; uric acid stones often not visible

CT KUB (Non-Contrast)

Precise stone size, number, density, and any associated pathology

Gold standard; detects all stone types including radiolucent ones

Cystoscopy

Direct visualisation of stone(s) and bladder wall condition

Confirms diagnosis; assesses bladder wall (trabeculation, tumour, diverticula)

Uroflowmetry & PVR

Flow rate and post-void residual volume

Identifies bladder outlet obstruction as underlying cause

In most cases, ultrasound is the first diagnostic modality; bladder stones are highly echogenic and produce a characteristic acoustic shadow that is easily recognised. CT KUB is most useful in cases with inconclusive ultrasound findings or in planning treatment for large or multiple stones. Cystoscopy, whether as a diagnostic outpatient procedure or combined with the treatment procedure itself, provides direct visual confirmation and allows simultaneous assessment of the bladder wall for any associated pathology (trabeculation suggesting chronic outlet obstruction, diverticula or, importantly, any suspicious lesions that might suggest bladder tumour coexisting with the stone).

Treatment of bladder stones varies according to size and number of stones present, and whether there is any underlying condition that needs to be treated at the same time. The main approaches are summarised in the below table:

Treatment

Stone Size

Approach

Hospital Stay

Cystolitholapaxy (Laser/Pneumatic)

Most stones up to ~4 cm

Endoscopic , cystoscope passed via urethra; stone fragmented and removed

Day care / overnight

Cystolitholapaxy (Large Stones)

> 4 cm or multiple stones

Endoscopic fragmentation, may require longer procedure time

1 night

Open / Laparoscopic Cystolithotomy

Very large stones; multiple/staghorn bladder stones

Direct surgical removal through small bladder incision

1–2 nights

Concurrent BPH/Obstruction Surgery

Any size with outlet obstruction

Combined stone removal + TURP or bladder neck procedure

1–2 nights

Bladder Stone in Children – Causes & Treatment

Paediatric bladder stone disease has a distinct epidemiology which is markedly different from that of adult bladder stones, and from that of kidney stone disease in children which is increasingly related to metabolic factors. Dietary and nutritional factors unique to certain regions and socioeconomic settings are most frequently implicated in the aetiology of bladder stones in children.

Why Bladder Stones Occur in Children in Certain Regions

  • Endemic paediatric bladder stone disease has been classically associated with low animal protein and high cereal-based phosphate-poor diets.
  • Low dietary phosphate intake causes low urinary phosphate and changes urinary chemistry, predisposing to ammonium urate and calcium oxalate bladder stones.
  • In hot climates, chronic dehydration concentrates urine and increases the saturation of stone-forming minerals, adding to the dietary risk factors.
  • Historically, this pattern of childhood bladder stone disease has been more common in certain rural and lower socioeconomic populations in parts of Asia, including India.

Dietary & Nutritional Factors in Paediatric Bladder Stones

  • The classic endemic pattern of bladder stone in children is observed in diets rich in cereals (rice, millet) with little dairy and animal protein intake.
  • Low calcium and phosphate intakes combined with high oxalate intakes from certain plant-based staples create urinary conditions that favour the formation of stone crystals.
  • Improved dietary diversity, increased dairy, animal protein and overall nutritional adequacy have been associated with a reduction in rates of this particular pattern of paediatric bladder stone disease in recent decades.
  • Adequate fluid intake from early childhood is protective and should be encouraged regardless of dietary pattern.

Symptoms of Bladder Stone in Children

  • Classic presentation includes crying during urination, grabbing or tugging at the genitals, and visible discomfort; children often cannot accurately describe the location of pain.
  • Intermittent urination, with the child needing to change position to continue voiding, is often noted by parents.
  • The usual presenting features are haematuria, especially at the end of micturition, and recurrent UTIs.
  • Any child with these findings, particularly if they are recurrent or persistent, should be examined with ultrasound as soon as possible.

Endoscopic Treatment Approach for Children

  • Cystolitholapaxy by endoscopy using a small paediatric cystoscope and laser or pneumatic lithotripsy without any open incision is the treatment of choice for bladder stones in children.
  • Performed under general anaesthesia as a day-case or short-stay procedure with stone fragments removed or allowed to pass naturally.
  • Diet counselling is important after stone removal to address the underlying nutritional factors to prevent recurrence.
  • Open cystolithotomy is reserved for very large stones that are not amenable to endoscopic fragmentation, uncommon with modern endoscopic equipment.

How to Prevent Bladder Stone Recurrence

Stone removal alone, without addressing the cause, often leads to recurrence. To prevent recurrence of bladder stone, the underlying cause that allowed the stone to form in the first place must be addressed. Definitive treatment of the BPH, whether with medication, UroLift, laser surgery, or other appropriate procedure, is essential in men with BPH-related bladder outlet obstruction to restore complete bladder emptying and eliminate the urinary stasis that drives stone formation. Bladder stones tend to recur unless the obstruction is removed.

Patients with neurogenic bladder managed by long-term catheterisation should have the catheter changed regularly (generally every two to four weeks in case of indwelling catheters), drink enough fluid to produce dilute urine, and change to intermittent catheterisation (which is associated with lower stone formation rates than indwelling catheters) where appropriate—all of which diminish recurrence risk. In patients with bladder diverticula, surgical excision of the diverticulum can be considered if the stones recur repeatedly in the diverticulum. This is a good general preventive measure for all patients irrespective of cause. Adequate hydration is necessary to dilute the urine and reduce the concentration of stone forming minerals. The urine should be pale and dilute throughout the day. Prompt and complete treatment of each infection is advantageous in patients with recurrent stone-associated UTIs, as chronic bacteriuria with urease-producing organisms directly favours stone formation.

Real Patient Experiences in Urology Care

Frequently Asked Questions About Bladder Stones

A kidney stone is formed inside the kidney and may stay there or travel down the ureter, causing the severe colicky pain of renal colic during travel. A bladder stone is formed (or, less frequently, completed) within the bladder, usually due to urinary stasis resulting from incomplete emptying of the bladder. Symptoms vary accordingly; classically, kidney stones cause flank pain radiating to the groin, while bladder stones cause suprapubic pain, urinary frequency, interrupted stream, and symptoms that change with body position. There are also differences in the treatment methods. Kidney stones are treated by RIRS , PCNL or ESWL depending on size and location. Bladder stones are most commonly treated by endoscopic cystolitholapaxy through the urethra.

A kidney stone is formed inside the kidney and may stay there or travel down the ureter, causing the severe colicky pain of renal colic during travel. A bladder stone is formed (or, less frequently, completed) within the bladder, usually due to urinary stasis resulting from incomplete emptying of the bladder. Symptoms vary accordingly; classically, kidney stones cause flank pain radiating to the groin, while bladder stones cause suprapubic pain, urinary frequency, interrupted stream, and symptoms that change with body position. There are also differences in the treatment methods. Kidney stones are treated by RIRS , PCNL or ESWL depending on size and location. Bladder stones are most commonly treated by endoscopic cystolitholapaxy through the urethra.

The usual treatment for most bladder stones is endoscopic cystolitholapaxy and is done with the patient under general or spinal anaesthesia, so the actual procedure is painless. After the procedure mild burning on urination and occasional blood stained urine are normal for a few days and are managed with simple analgesics and increased fluid intake. Most patients are discharged the same day or after one night in hospital. In simple cases, people usually go back to their normal activities within two or three days. If the procedure is done at the same time as surgery for BPH (for men with bladder outlet obstruction), then recovery is on the same schedule as that combined procedure, which is often one to two weeks for full recovery.

Bladder stone recurrence is nearly always caused by an untreated underlying condition, most commonly persistent bladder outlet obstruction (untreated or undertreated BPH), neurogenic bladder with incomplete emptying, an indwelling catheter acting as a nidus for new stone formation, or a bladder diverticulum where urine continues to stagnate. If stone is removed but cause of urinary stasis is not addressed, the same conditions that allowed the first stone to form are still in place and a new stone will typically form over months to years . That’s why it is important to do a complete work-up to find out what is causing it and develop a treatment plan that deals with the cause and not just the stone itself to prevent recurrence.

Yes, bladder stones are much less common in women than in men but that’s mostly because the most common cause (bladder outlet obstruction due to BPH) only occurs in men. In women, bladder stones are more commonly associated with neurogenic bladder, long-term catheterisation, bladder diverticula, foreign bodies (including surgical mesh or sutures from previous pelvic surgery) or , rarely , significant pelvic organ prolapse leading to incomplete bladder emptying. It is particularly important to find out the underlying reason for a bladder stone in a woman, because the usual male cause (BPH) does not apply and another explanation must be sought.

If left untreated a bladder stone will in most cases continue to grow over time as the conditions that allowed it to form (urinary stasis) continue. As the stone enlarges, urinary symptoms worsen, pain increases, interruptions of urine flow become more frequent and severe, and recurrent infections become more troublesome. Large longstanding bladder stones can cause chronic bladder wall irritation and inflammation . In rare cases bladder stones have been associated with an increased risk of squamous cell carcinoma of the bladder , a rare but recognised long-term complication of chronic bladder stone irritation . If bladder stones are left untreated they can also exacerbate any underlying obstruction and in severe long standing cases this can lead to changes to the upper urinary tract (hydronephrosis). If treated early, this progressive deterioration can be prevented.

Small-to-moderate-sized bladder calculi (up to about four centimetres) are generally managed by endoscopic cystolitholapaxy . Laser or pneumatic energy is delivered via a cystoscope to fragment the stone, with fragments either being retrieved or irrigated away. Larger stones, multiple stones or stones with very hard composition can require longer endoscopic procedure times or in some cases open or laparoscopic cystolithotomy, a small incision into the bladder through which the stone is removed directly. The selection is dependent on the stone size, number, composition (assessed by CT density) and the surgeon’s assessment of what can be safely achieved endoscopically in a reasonable procedure time . Dr. Vikas Singh is very experienced in endoscopy and even large stones can often be treated without open surgery.

Bladder stones are primarily located in the bladder but may have implications in the upper urinary tract in some cases. Sometimes a large bladder stone or a stone near the ureteric orifices may partially block one or both ureters and cause hydronephrosis (swelling of the kidney). Chronic bladder outlet obstruction, the etiologic factor in many bladder stones, can cause bilateral hydronephrosis and progressive impairment of kidney function if longstanding and severe, regardless of the stone itself. Assessment of kidney function and upper tract imaging is part of the standard evaluation of any patient with a significant bladder stone, especially if it is large or has been present for a long time.

Bladder stones themselves are not, in most cases, a cause of bladder cancer. A chronic bladder stone, however, may cause chronic irritation and has been associated with an increased risk for squamous cell carcinoma of the bladder, a less common type of bladder cancer that is different from the more common urothelial (transitional cell) carcinoma. This association is more relevant for very long-standing, untreated stones. In addition, as some of the symptoms of bladder stone (haematuria, irritative voiding symptoms) overlap with the symptoms of bladder cancer, cystoscopy for the diagnosis or treatment of stones also serves the important role of examining the bladder wall for any separate or coexisting tumour, particularly important in patients with risk factors for bladder cancer such as smoking history.