How To Identify Kidney Pain

Accompanying Symptoms

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An individual's accompanying symptoms can indicate they may be experiencing kidney pain as opposed to pain of another type of tissue. The kidneys can be affected by conditions that produce symptoms such as hematuria, urinary frequency, vomiting, fever, chills, fatigue, cloudy urine, dark urine, pain when urinating, nausea, diarrhea, constipation, and dizziness. Individuals affected by a disease that has caused major damage to their kidney structure or functionality may experience foul-smelling breath, shortness of breath, confusion, muscle cramping, metallic taste, leg swelling, ankle swelling, irregular heartbeat, and swelling of the feet. Patients with back pain rather than kidney pain will have different accompanying symptoms such as spinal aches, spinal stiffness, neck pain, muscle spasms, problems walking, and numbness and tingling that progresses from the back to the limbs. These accompanying symptoms can be confirmed through the use of a urine test, blood test, CT scans, x-rays, and ultrasounds.

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