Endoscopic Kidney Stone Removal: The Complete Patient Guide (2026)
- What is endoscopic kidney stone removal? (URS/RIRS)
- Exactly who needs this procedure – size/location chart
- Step‑by‑step surgical walkthrough (with anaesthesia details)
- Day‑by‑day recovery diary (day 0 to day 30)
- Cost breakdown: India vs US vs UK vs Australia
- Risks, complications, and how we minimise them
- URS vs ESWL vs PCNL vs open surgery – comparison table
- How to prepare (pre‑op checklist)
- Life after stent removal – long‑term stone prevention
- Interactive FAQ (20+ patient questions answered)
What is endoscopic kidney stone removal? (URS and RIRS explained)
Endoscopic kidney stone removal refers to two closely related procedures: Ureteroscopy (URS) for stones in the ureter, and Retrograde Intrarenal Surgery (RIRS) for stones inside the kidney. Both use a thin, flexible scope (about 3mm diameter) inserted through the urethra – no skin incisions. The surgeon either extracts the stone with a tiny basket or breaks it into dust using a holmium laser. This is the gold standard for stones 5mm to 20mm that are not responding to conservative management.
The procedure is performed under spinal or general anaesthesia and typically takes 30–90 minutes. Most patients go home the same day or after one overnight stay.
Exactly who needs this procedure? (Stone size & location chart)
| Stone location | Size | Recommended treatment | Why endoscopy? |
|---|---|---|---|
| Lower ureter (near bladder) | 5–10 mm | URS with basket | Highest success rate (95%+) |
| Mid/upper ureter | 6–15 mm | URS with laser | ESWL often fails here |
| Kidney (renal pelvis or calyx) | 10–20 mm | RIRS with laser | Avoids PCNL puncture |
| Any location | >20 mm | PCNL first choice | Endoscopy possible but may need multiple sessions |
| Any location | <5 mm | Medical expulsion therapy first | Endoscopy only if pain/infection |
Step‑by‑step surgical walkthrough (what happens inside the OT)
- Pre‑operative preparation: You will be asked to fast for 6 hours. A urine test confirms no active infection.
- Anaesthesia: Spinal anaesthesia (numb from waist down) or general anaesthesia. You feel nothing.
- Urethral access: The surgeon gently inserts the ureteroscope through the urethra into the bladder.
- Ureteral navigation: A thin guidewire is passed up the ureter. The scope follows the wire.
- Stone visualisation: High‑definition camera shows the stone’s exact position, shape, and hardness.
- Laser fragmentation (if needed): A 200‑micron holmium laser fibre breaks the stone into tiny pieces (<1mm).
- Extraction: Smaller fragments are removed with a nitinol basket. Dust is left to pass in urine.
- Stent placement: A double‑J stent (thin tube from kidney to bladder) is placed if the ureter is swollen or to prevent fragment obstruction. It stays for 7–14 days.
- Recovery room: You are monitored for 1–2 hours. Most patients drink fluids and walk within 6 hours.
Day‑by‑day recovery diary (what actually happens)
| Day | Symptoms | Allowed activities | Pro tips |
|---|---|---|---|
| Day 0 (surgery day) | Groggy, mild burning with first urination, pink urine | Bed rest; sips of water | Use a bedpan if spinal anaesthesia hasn't worn off |
| Day 1 | Mild flank pain (stent), frequency/urgency, blood streaks | Walk around house; shower OK | Drink 2 litres water; take prescribed tamsulosin |
| Day 2–3 | Pain decreases, but stent causes urgency and occasional flank twinge | Return to desk work (remote or office) | Avoid heavy lifting (>5 kg) |
| Day 4–7 | Urine clears. Stent awareness: you feel it when you bend or empty bladder | Light exercise (walking, stretching) | Use heating pad for flank discomfort |
| Day 8–14 | Stent removal (clinic procedure – 1 minute). Relief is immediate | Normal non‑contact activities | After stent removal, you may have mild back pain for 1 day |
| Week 3–4 | Complete recovery. No restrictions | Full exercise, swimming, sex | Continue high fluid intake to prevent new stones |
Cost breakdown: endoscopic kidney stone removal in 2026
At Vivekananda Hospital, Hyderabad, the cost is significantly lower than Western countries, with the same quality of equipment and experienced urologists.
| Country / Hospital | URS without laser | URS with laser | RIRS (flexible scope) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Vivekananda Hospital (India) | ₹25,000 – ₹40,000 | ₹45,000 – ₹70,000 | ₹60,000 – ₹90,000 |
| USA (average) | $8,000 – $15,000 | $12,000 – $25,000 | $18,000 – $30,000 |
| UK (NHS private) | £3,000 – £5,000 | £4,500 – £7,000 | £6,000 – £9,000 |
| Australia (private) | AUD $5,000 – $8,000 | AUD $7,000 – $12,000 | AUD $10,000 – $15,000 |
Insurance cashless facility available at Vivekananda Hospital for most Indian and international policies. For international patients, we offer package deals including hospital stay and follow‑up.
Risks and complications – real numbers from 2025 meta‑analysis
- Urinary tract infection: 2‑5% – treated with oral antibiotics.
- Ureteral injury (perforation): <1% – usually heals with stent placement.
- Residual fragments >2mm: 5‑10% for stones >15mm – may need second look.
- Stent discomfort (frequency, urgency, flank pain): 70% – temporary, resolves after removal.
- Stricture (narrowing of ureter): 0.5% – rare, treatable with balloon dilation.
URS vs ESWL vs PCNL vs open surgery – which is best for you?
| Procedure | Incisions | Stone size limit | Success rate | Recovery time | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| URS / RIRS | None (via urethra) | Up to 20mm | 90‑95% | 3‑7 days | Ureteral stones, lower pole stones |
| ESWL (shock wave) | None | <15mm | 70‑85% | 1‑2 days | Small kidney stones, non‑hard density |
| PCNL | 1cm back incision | >20mm or staghorn | 95% | 1‑2 weeks | Large or complex kidney stones |
| Open surgery | Large flank incision | Any | 98% | 4‑6 weeks | Only for failed endoscopy/anatomical abnormalities |
How to prepare for endoscopic kidney stone removal (pre‑op checklist)
- 1 week before: Stop blood thinners (aspirin, clopidogrel, warfarin) after consulting your cardiologist.
- 48 hours before: Urine culture to rule out infection. If positive, antibiotics will be started.
- Night before: Light dinner. No solid food after midnight. Clear fluids allowed up to 2 hours before surgery.
- Day of surgery: Arrive 2 hours early. Bring all medical records, insurance card, and a family member.
- What to pack: Loose clothes, slippers, phone charger, a book (you will be awake most of the day).
Life after stent removal – long‑term stone prevention
Having one stone puts you at 50% risk of another within 5 years. Endoscopy removes the stone but does not change your metabolism. Follow these proven prevention steps:
- Drink 2.5–3 litres of water daily (aim for clear or pale yellow urine).
- Reduce dietary oxalate: limit spinach, nuts, tea, chocolate.
- Normal calcium intake (do not restrict – dietary calcium binds oxalate in the gut).
- Limit sodium to <2,300 mg/day (salt increases urinary calcium).
- If you had calcium oxalate stones, your doctor may prescribe thiazide diuretics or potassium citrate.
- Get a 24‑hour urine test at 3 months post‑op to tailor prevention.
Interactive FAQ – 20+ real patient questions answered
Most patients rate the first 24 hours as 3–4 (mild to moderate). After 2 days, it drops to 1–2. The stent causes discomfort (urgency) but not sharp pain.
Yes, after 3–4 days if no stent or after stent removal. With a stent in place, flying is safe but the pressure changes may increase urgency. Check with your doctor.
Not routinely. A Foley catheter is placed only if you cannot urinate on your own after spinal anaesthesia. It is removed the next morning.
In the clinic: a flexible cystoscope (thin camera) is passed through the urethra into the bladder. The doctor grasps the stent string or uses a grasper. Takes 60 seconds. Mild stinging for a few hours.
Wait until the stent is removed and any blood in urine is gone – about 2 weeks. After that, normal sexual activity is fine.
Holmium laser fragments all stone types (calcium oxalate monohydrate, cystine, brushite). It may take longer, but success is still >90%.
No. It is safe for children (using smaller scopes) and elderly patients (even over 90) as long as anaesthesia risk is assessed.
Yes, the same metabolic problem remains. Without prevention, 50% recurrence in 5 years. With lifestyle changes and medications, risk drops to 10‑15%.
Most Indian insurance companies (Star Health, Niva Bupa, HDFC Ergo, etc.) have cashless agreements with us. International patients should check with their provider; we provide itemised bills for reimbursement.
Medical disclaimer: This information is for educational purposes. Always consult a qualified urologist for personal medical advice. Vivekananda Hospital provides emergency and elective urological care 24/7.