The case for a metabolic workup
People form stones for different reasons. One person's stones are driven by high urine calcium; another's by low citrate; another's by high oxalate. Generic advice like "drink more water and reduce salt" is fine, but it misses the point for most recurrent stone formers. Your prevention plan should be tailored to what your labs actually show.
A metabolic workup is recommended if you've had:
- Two or more stones in your lifetime
- A family history of kidney stones
- Stones starting at a young age (under 30)
- Unusual stone compositions (uric acid, cystine, struvite)
- Kidney problems or a solitary kidney
- Conditions that predispose to stones (gout, inflammatory bowel disease, primary hyperparathyroidism)
Components of the workup
Stone analysis
If you have a stone — saved from passing, or retrieved during a procedure — send it to the lab. Knowing the type is the single most valuable piece of information for targeting prevention.
Common stone types:
- Calcium oxalate (~70%)
- Calcium phosphate (~10%)
- Uric acid (~10%)
- Struvite (infection stones) (~5%)
- Cystine (<1%, genetic)
Blood tests
Basic metabolic panel, calcium, phosphorus, uric acid, PTH (parathyroid hormone). Looking for:
- Kidney function abnormalities
- High calcium (suggests hyperparathyroidism)
- High uric acid (suggests gout tendency or uric acid stones)
The 24-hour urine collection
The most important test in the workup. You collect every drop of urine for 24 hours in a provided container kept cold. The lab then measures:
- Total volume — target >2.5 L/day
- Calcium — high levels promote calcium stones
- Oxalate — high levels promote calcium oxalate stones
- Citrate — a natural stone inhibitor; low levels increase risk
- Uric acid — high levels promote uric acid stones
- Sodium — high intake drives calcium into urine
- pH — low pH promotes uric acid stones; high pH promotes calcium phosphate
- Creatinine — confirms you collected a complete 24 hours
Ideally you do this twice — once on a regular day and a follow-up after making initial changes — to see what's working.
Targeted prevention strategies
If your urine volume is low
The single most impactful change. Target 2.5–3 liters of urine per day (requires 3–3.5 liters of fluid in). Your urine should be nearly clear most of the day. This alone can reduce recurrence by 50%.
If your urine calcium is high
Usually genetic. Treatment:
- Thiazide diuretics (hydrochlorothiazide, chlorthalidone) reduce calcium excretion dramatically.
- Reduce dietary sodium to under 2,300 mg/day — high sodium drives calcium into urine.
- Continue normal dietary calcium — don't restrict calcium intake. Dietary calcium binds oxalate in the gut and reduces stone risk.
If your urine oxalate is high
Reduce high-oxalate foods. The biggest offenders:
- Spinach (major)
- Rhubarb (major)
- Beets and beet greens
- Almonds, cashews, peanuts
- Chocolate and cocoa
- Black tea (iced or hot)
- Soy products (tofu, soy milk)
- Sweet potatoes
Don't cut these out completely — just reduce. Also, eat calcium-rich foods with oxalate-containing meals so calcium binds the oxalate in the gut before absorption.
If your urine citrate is low
Potassium citrate (or its dietary equivalent — real lemons and limes) raises urinary citrate, a natural stone inhibitor. Many urologists use potassium citrate prescription.
Drink 4 oz of real lemon juice daily in water. Lemonade from concentrate doesn't count.
If your urine uric acid is high
- Reduce purine-rich foods: red meat, organ meats, anchovies, sardines.
- Moderate alcohol, especially beer.
- If stones are pure uric acid: potassium citrate alkalinizes urine and dissolves stones.
- Allopurinol if uric acid is very high or gout coexists.
If you form struvite (infection) stones
These grow in the setting of chronic UTIs from certain bacteria. Treatment is aggressive stone removal and eradication of infection, often with a urology subspecialist.
Universal prevention principles
- Drink consistently throughout the day. Sipping is better than chugging. Keep a water bottle visible.
- Real lemon juice in water. Cheapest prevention strategy there is.
- Eat calcium-rich foods with every meal, not avoidance. Yogurt, milk, cheese.
- Moderate your salt — more than 2,300 mg/day drives calcium into the urine.
- Moderate animal protein. Large amounts raise acid load on kidneys.
- Limit sugary beverages and high-fructose corn syrup — associated with stone formation.
- Treat metabolic syndrome. Obesity, diabetes, and metabolic syndrome all increase stone risk.
Monitoring
After implementing your prevention plan:
- Repeat 24-hour urine at 3–6 months to confirm changes are working.
- Periodic renal ultrasound or low-dose CT every 1–2 years to detect new stones before they cause problems.
- Adjust the plan based on labs and your tolerance of changes.
When to call
Call for any acute flank pain or suspected stone passage, especially with fever. Schedule a non-urgent consultation if you've had two or more stones and haven't done a metabolic workup, or if you're on a prevention plan and want to reassess.
📞 (801) 432-3022Always consult Dr. Childs or another qualified health provider with questions about your specific situation.