Kidney stone sufferers learn to redefine their own concept of pain. Over the past 15-20 years, physicians and hospital emergency rooms have attempted to standardize the concept of pain through the use of the 10-point “smiley face” pain scale. Since there is nothing beyond “10”, most kidney sufferers understand a “10” to be the pain they experience during the roughest parts of the kidney stone process. Consequently, while we may suffer significant pain from other conditions, illnesses, or accidents, rarely can we describe that pain much higher than a “5” or “6” on the pain scale. In other words, the pain of say, a broken leg for a non-kidney stone sufferer may rate a “10” for them; but it is highly unlikely that anyone having experienced a kidney stone will rate that same pain much higher than “6” when comparing this pain to that experienced during a kidney stone episode.
Until next time...cheers!
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