SSuyeong CheongdamUrology · Busan
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Urinary Stone Clinic

Urinary Stones in Busan, Korea

Kidney-stone pain is often compared to childbirth — it comes on suddenly, in severe waves, when a stone lodges in the ureter and blocks the flow of urine. It is one of the most common urological emergencies, and it tends to recur.

Same-day imaging24-hour ESWL roomPrivate recovery room
TL;DR — quick answer

Kidney-stone pain is often compared to childbirth — it comes on suddenly, in severe waves, when a stone lodges in the ureter and blocks the flow of urine. It is one of the most common urological emergencies, and it tends to recur.

Overview

Kidney-stone pain is often compared to childbirth — it comes on suddenly, in severe waves, when a stone lodges in the ureter and blocks the flow of urine. It is one of the most common urological emergencies, and it tends to recur.

At Suyeong Cheongdam we treat suitable stones with extracorporeal shock-wave lithotripsy (ESWL) — a non-surgical treatment that breaks the stone into passable fragments — and patients rest and recover in a private room. A 24-hour stone room means acute pain is met promptly rather than after a long wait.

Symptoms & signs

  • Sudden, severe cramping pain in the flank or side, in waves
  • Pain radiating to the lower abdomen or groin
  • Pink, red or brown urine
  • Nausea and vomiting with the pain
  • Frequent, painful urination
  • Fever or chills — a sign of infection needing urgent care

Causes & risk factors

  • Low fluid intake and concentrated urine
  • A diet high in salt, oxalate or animal protein
  • A personal or family history of stones
  • Certain metabolic conditions and gout
  • Recurrent urinary infections (some stone types)
Our approach

How we care for urinary stones

A clear, step-by-step pathway — with same-day testing wherever possible, and kind, attentive care.

Prompt assessment

We confirm the classic stone-pain pattern and check for red flags such as fever.

Same-day imaging

Ultrasound and X-ray locate and size the stone and check for obstruction of the kidney.

Fast pain relief

Effective analgesia is a first priority while the stone is assessed.

ESWL treatment

Suitable stones are broken up with shock-wave lithotripsy; you recover in a private room.

Prevention review

Once clear, we review fluids and diet to reduce the risk of the next stone.

Good to know

A stone with fever is a genuine emergency — it can mean infection behind an obstruction — so if you have severe flank pain with a temperature, seek care immediately rather than waiting. Our 24-hour stone room and dedicated emergency line exist for exactly this.

Why Suyeong Cheongdam

Care with a difference

Stone care here pairs prompt, same-day imaging with ESWL and a private recovery room, so treatment is quick, comfortable and matched to the stone. For a visitor to Busan struck by sudden stone pain, English-speaking support and round-the-clock capability turn a frightening situation into a managed one.

Sources: American Urological Association (AUA) and European Association of Urology (EAU) clinical guidance; Korean Urological Association. Educational information only — not a substitute for in-person evaluation by a physician.
Frequently asked

Questions from foreign patients

No — extracorporeal shock-wave lithotripsy breaks the stone from outside the body, with no incision, so fragments can pass naturally. Most patients tolerate it well.

Our 24-hour stone room and emergency line are set up for exactly that — prompt assessment and relief rather than waiting for office hours.

Many small stones do, with fluids and pain relief. Larger or obstructing stones usually need ESWL or another procedure — imaging tells us which.

Yes — English-speaking support is available; if you can, call ahead so we can prepare for your arrival.