Reference — Renal
Kidney Stone Types & Prevention Reference
Identifying the stone type is what makes prevention specific. Each type favors a different urine pH and responds to different diet changes — but one rule is universal: keep urine dilute with high fluid intake.
Educational use only. Dietary and pharmacologic prevention is individualized and provider-directed. This reference is an educational aid. This material supports nursing education and exam review. It is not medical advice and is not a substitute for clinical judgment, institutional policy, or medical direction. Always follow facility protocols and current provider orders.
The Four Stone Types
| Stone type | Frequency | Urine pH | Prevention |
|---|---|---|---|
| Calcium (oxalate/phosphate) | Most common (~75–80%) | Oxalate forms in any pH; phosphate favors alkaline | High fluids; limit oxalate (spinach, nuts, chocolate, tea) and excess sodium; keep dietary calcium NORMAL (don't over-restrict); thiazides may be used |
| Struvite (infection) | ~10–15% | Alkaline (urease-producing bacteria) | Treat/prevent UTIs; may need stone removal; acidify urine per orders |
| Uric acid | ~5–10% | Acidic | High fluids; limit purines (organ/red meat); alkalinize urine (potassium citrate); allopurinol if gout |
| Cystine | Rare (hereditary) | Acidic | High fluids; alkalinize urine; cystine-binding agents |
The Calcium Paradox
It seems intuitive to cut calcium for calcium stones — but restricting dietary calcium can backfire. Normal dietary calcium binds oxalate in the gut so less oxalate is absorbed and excreted. So for calcium-oxalate stones, keep normal dietary calcium, and instead reduce oxalate-rich foods and excess sodium (high sodium increases urinary calcium). High fluid intake remains the foundation.
Universal Prevention
Regardless of type: drink enough fluid to keep urine pale and dilute (often ~2.5–3 L/day unless contraindicated), stay active, and treat metabolic contributors. A 24-hour urine collection and stone analysis guide individualized prevention.
NCLEX Pearls
- ✦Calcium stones are most common; struvite = infection stones (alkaline urine, can form staghorn calculi).
- ✦Uric acid and cystine stones form in ACIDIC urine → alkalinize; struvite forms in ALKALINE urine.
- ✦Calcium-oxalate diet: keep dietary calcium NORMAL, limit oxalate (spinach/nuts/chocolate/tea) and sodium.
- ✦Uric acid stones: limit purines (organ/red meat), alkalinize urine, allopurinol if gout; they are radiolucent.
- ✦High fluid intake to keep urine dilute is the #1 prevention for ALL stone types.
- ✦Send the stone for analysis — the type drives targeted prevention.
Related Resources
Standards & sources
Fact-checked Jun 21, 2026This page is written to align with KDIGO Clinical Practice Guidelines · National Kidney Foundation (NKF). It is an educational summary, not a citation of any single document — always verify specific doses, values, and protocols against current guidelines and your facility policy. How we source content →
