Kidney stone pain: symptoms, scans and treatment options

June 27, 2026 by user

Patient education

Kidney stone pain: symptoms, scans and treatment options

What kidney stone pain can feel like and how stones are investigated and treated.

Quick answer

Kidney stone pain can cause severe loin-to-groin pain, nausea, blood in urine and urinary symptoms. Fever with stone pain needs urgent assessment.

What this can mean

Not every stone needs surgery. Management depends on stone size, location, symptoms, infection risk and kidney function.

Scans help confirm the diagnosis and guide whether observation, medication, shockwave treatment, ureteroscopy or laser treatment may be discussed.

How specialist assessment may help

  • Assess pain pattern and infection symptoms.
  • Review imaging and stone location.
  • Check kidney function where needed.
  • Discuss observation versus active treatment.

Questions to ask at your appointment

  • How large is the stone?
  • Where is it located?
  • Is there blockage or infection?
  • What treatment options apply?

Common questions

When is stone pain urgent?

Severe pain, fever, vomiting, a single kidney or difficulty passing urine should prompt urgent medical help.

Can stones pass by themselves?

Some small stones pass, but this depends on size, location and symptoms.

General information only. It should not replace personalised advice from a qualified clinician. Last updated 27 June 2026.

Birmingham Advanced Urology
Private consultant urology care in Birmingham, Worcestershire and the West Midlands.

Mr Syed Ali Shahzad
Consultant Urological and Robotic Surgeon
GMC: 6071731

Appointments and enquiries
Yasmin Khan, Secretary
Yasmin.Khan@hcaconsultant.co.uk
+44 7866 009874
Message on WhatsApp

The information on this website is for general information only and should not replace medical advice from a qualified clinician. If you are experiencing severe pain, heavy bleeding, inability to pass urine, fever with urinary symptoms or symptoms requiring urgent attention, seek urgent medical help through NHS 111, your GP, A&E or emergency services depending on severity.

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