Kidney Stone Surgery Recovery Time: Day‑by‑Day Guide (URS, PCNL, ESWL)
- Recovery overview by procedure type (URS vs PCNL vs ESWL)
- Day‑by‑day recovery after URS (ureteroscopy)
- Day‑by‑day recovery after PCNL
- Recovery after ESWL (shock wave lithotripsy)
- Managing the double‑J stent – what is normal, what is not
- Return to work timeline for desk vs physical jobs
- Interactive FAQ – 9 common questions
Recovery overview by procedure type (URS vs PCNL vs ESWL)
Recovery time depends heavily on which procedure you had. Here is a quick comparison based on our experience at Vivekananda Hospital:
| Procedure | Hospital stay | Return to desk work | Return to physical work | Full recovery (no restrictions) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| URS (ureteroscopy with laser) | 0‑1 day (most go home same day) | 2‑3 days | 7‑14 days (after stent removal) | 2‑3 weeks |
| PCNL (percutaneous nephrolithotomy) | 2‑3 days | 5‑7 days | 2‑3 weeks | 4‑6 weeks |
| ESWL (shock wave lithotripsy) | 0 days (outpatient) | 1‑2 days | 3‑5 days | 1‑2 weeks |
Day‑by‑day recovery after URS (ureteroscopy)
URS is the most common stone surgery. Most patients go home the same day. Here is what to expect:
- Day 0 (surgery day): Wake with mild burning on urination. Pink or light red urine is normal. You can eat and drink after 2‑3 hours. Walk around the recovery room. Discharge same day or next morning. You will likely have a double‑J stent.
- Day 1‑2: Burning with urination decreases. You may feel urgency and frequency – the stent is irritating the bladder. Flank pain when urinating (urine refluxing up the stent) is normal. Take tamsulosin as prescribed. Drink 2‑3 litres of water. Return to light desk work from home if comfortable.
- Day 3‑7: Blood in urine should be gone or only trace. Stent discomfort continues but is manageable with paracetamol. You can drive, cook, and do household chores. Avoid heavy lifting (>5kg).
- Day 8‑14: Stent removal (clinic procedure, 1 minute). After removal, urgency and flank pain resolve within 24 hours. You can resume all normal activities including exercise.
Day‑by‑day recovery after PCNL
PCNL is for larger stones and requires a small back incision. Recovery takes longer but is still faster than open surgery.
- Day 0 (surgery day): You wake with a dressing on your back. A urinary catheter and possibly a nephrostomy tube (if not tubeless). Pain at the incision site (manageable with IV painkillers). You will stay in hospital overnight.
- Day 1: Catheter removed. You can walk with assistance. Nephrostomy tube (if present) is usually removed on day 1‑2. Start drinking water. Eat a normal diet. Pain is 3‑4/10.
- Day 2‑3: Discharge home. The back incision is small – keep it dry for 48 hours. You may still have a ureteral stent (will be removed later). Pain is controlled with oral ibuprofen.
- Day 4‑7: Back to desk work (remote or office). Avoid bending or lifting. Stent causes urgency and flank pain. You can shower normally after 48 hours.
- Week 2‑3: Stent removal. Incision healed. Return to light physical activity (walking, stretching). No heavy lifting until week 4.
- Week 4‑6: Full recovery – you can exercise, swim, lift weights.
Recovery after ESWL (shock wave lithotripsy)
ESWL is non‑invasive – no incisions, no anaesthesia (only sedation). Recovery is the fastest, but success rates are lower.
- Day 0: You go home the same day. You may have bruising on your back/flank where the shock waves entered. Mild discomfort. Drink plenty of water.
- Day 1‑2: You may pass stone fragments (look like gravel). Some blood in urine – normal. You can return to desk work immediately. Avoid strenuous exercise for 2‑3 days.
- Day 3‑7: Bruising fades. Most people feel completely normal. Continue drinking water to help fragments pass.
Managing the double‑J stent – what is normal, what is not
A double‑J stent is a thin tube placed from the kidney to the bladder. It is used after URS and sometimes after PCNL. Stent symptoms are very common – up to 80% of patients experience them. Here is what is normal:
- Urgency (feeling you need to urinate constantly).
- Frequency (urinating every 1‑2 hours).
- Flank pain when your bladder is full or when you urinate (urine refluxes up the stent).
- Mild blood in urine, especially with activity.
- Discomfort during sexual activity.
What is NOT normal (call your doctor):
- Fever >101°F – possible infection.
- Heavy bleeding with large clots.
- Inability to urinate for more than 12 hours.
- Severe pain not relieved by prescribed medication.
Return to work timeline for desk vs physical jobs
When you can return to work depends on your job type:
- Desk job (remote or office): URS – 2‑3 days; PCNL – 5‑7 days; ESWL – 1‑2 days.
- Physical job (labour, lifting, construction): URS – wait until stent removal (7‑14 days); PCNL – 3‑4 weeks; ESWL – 1 week.
- Driving: URS – 2‑3 days (once off narcotics); PCNL – 1 week; ESWL – 1 day.
Listen to your body. If you feel tired or have pain, take an extra day or two. Returning too soon can delay healing.
Interactive FAQ – Kidney stone surgery recovery
For URS: 2‑3 weeks to feel 100%. For PCNL: 4‑6 weeks. For ESWL: 1‑2 weeks. However, most people return to normal activities much sooner – within a few days for URS and ESWL.
For desk jobs, many patients work from home on day 2 or 3. Same‑day return is not realistic due to anaesthesia and stent discomfort. For physical jobs, wait 7‑14 days.
That is the stent. When your bladder contracts, urine is forced up the stent into your kidney, causing a momentary ache. It is normal and stops after the stent is removed.
2.5‑3 litres per day. This helps pass stone fragments, prevents infection, and reduces stent discomfort. Avoid caffeine and alcohol – they irritate the bladder.
Light walking: same day for URS/ESWL, day 2 for PCNL. Running, gym, heavy lifting: wait until stent removal (URS) or 3‑4 weeks (PCNL). ESWL – 1 week.
After URS: wait until stent removal (7‑14 days). After PCNL: 2‑3 weeks. After ESWL: 3‑5 days. Resuming earlier may cause bleeding or discomfort but is not dangerous.
Yes. After URS and ESWL, small fragments (1‑3mm) can pass for several weeks. You may feel a mild pinch. Strain urine and save fragments for analysis.
There are no specific restrictions, but avoid high‑oxalate foods (spinach, nuts, tea) if you had a calcium stone. Also avoid spicy foods if they worsen your bladder symptoms. Focus on hydration.
Call if you have fever >101°F, heavy bleeding with clots, inability to urinate for 12 hours, severe pain not relieved by medication, or vomiting preventing fluid intake.
Disclaimer: Recovery times vary. Follow your surgeon’s specific post‑operative instructions. If you have concerns or unusual symptoms, contact Vivekananda Hospital immediately.