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This patient support community is for discussions relating to urology issues, benign prostate disease, penis curvature, cystisis, kidney stones, pediatric urology, prostate, sexual dysfunction, urinary tract infections, and urological cancers.
"There are multiple causes of blood in urine. Some are serious, including cancers, trauma, stones, infections, and obstructions of the urinary tract. Others are less important, and may require no treatment. These may include viral infections, nonspecific inflammations of the kidney, medications which thin the blood's clotting ability, and benign prostate enlargement"
www.medicinenet.com/blood_in_urine/article.htm
Have you noticed at what stage of urination the blood appears in the urine? Does it appear at the beginning, at the end, or is present throughout the time you pass urine?
How old are you?
A UTI can cause blood to appear in the urine as it results in an infection of the bladder or other structures above the bladder.
Flank pain can be associated with renal stones as you are describing it appears in bouts.
It is possible that you pass small stones at intervals which cause a lot of pain as they are passing through the tract, abrade the tract while they are passing through, and cause the bleeding while predisposing you to infection.
Small stones which pass through the tract do not show up on investigation usually.
An infection with E.Coli can, and needs to, be treated with antibiotics.
Do you have any family history of kidney stones?
In addition to drinking plenty of water, you can do the following:
Take natural sources of vitamin C, such as citrus juices.
Try to avoid oxalate rich food.
Increase your intake of natural sources of calcium, such as milk and yoghurt.
If you are female, wipe from front to back while in the restroom.
You need to be on antibiotics that the cultured E. Coli is sensitive to. So talk to your physician about it.
Do keep us posted on your doubts and progress.
regards
I have been on antibiotics with each of the five episodes that have taken me to the doctor. On four of five of the episodes, the urine dipstick showed blood only with no WBCs or bacteria. They were sent for culture anyway and all except the last one came back negative. I ended up developing a UTI all five times based on repeat dipsticks and continued pain. That's why I feel like I most have a stone somewhere in the tract that is predisposing me to infections. The doctor says it's probably not a stone--just infection causing the blood since they haven't seen anything on CT. However, I feel like something is continuing to cause the infections.
I wipe front to back; I urinate before and after sex; I take showers instead of tub baths; I wear cotton panties; I drink 6-8 glasses of water a day, usually more. However I used to drink 5-6 diet sodas a day and 3-4 cups of coffee with 1-2 glasses of water. I've stopped doing that for well over six months and I've continued to have problems. I will try the other suggestions you mentioned. I am also seeing a urologist next week who wants to perform a urodynamics study.
The sediment that appears like sand could be tiny stones from the kidney.
The stage of urination at which blood appears is indicative of the part of the urinary tract that is injured. So it would help if you noticed it.
The shape of the clots - long and thin, or round - would also indicate which area of the tract the bleeding is from.
If you have been pregnant or lactating and have not been taking significant amounts of calcium in your diet (1000 mg), that would aggravate the problem.
Oxalate-rich foods have been known to cause calcium oxalate stones in individuals predisposed to developing renal