Doctors may have found an unconventional way to get rid of painful kidney stones — but it will cost you a trip to Disney World.
Researchers found that riding the Big Thunder Mountain Railroad roller coaster at Disney World could help ease the passage of small kidney stones, according to the new study.
Kidney stones
are hard masses of minerals that form in the kidneys. They can range in
size, from a tiny grain of sand to, in extreme cases, the size of a
golf ball. Patients with kidney stones don't always need treatment,
because the stones can pass out of the body on their own, but the
process of passing them can be quite painful. The stones must travel
from the kidney down the ureter and to the bladder, and then exit the
body through the urethra.
The authors of the new study, published on the 26th of Sept. in the Journal of the American Osteopathic Association,
noticed that several of their patients had reported passing kidney
stones after going on the Big Thunder Mountain Railroad roller coaster
at Disney World in Florida.
In one instance, for example, a man told the doctors that he passed a
stone after three consecutive rides on the roller coaster, according to
the study. [16 Oddest Medical Cases]
Studying this phenomenon required a bit of ingenuity from the
researchers. To test the effects of riding a roller coaster with kidney
stones, they created a 3D model of a kidney that could be taken along for the ride (concealed in a backpack, of course).
In the experiment, the researchers placed three real kidney stones and some urine in the model kidney. The kidney stones were different sizes: small (4.5 cubic millimeters), medium (13.5 cubic mm) and large (64.6 cubic mm).
The researchers took the model kidney on the Big Thunder Mountain
Railroad roller coaster 20 times. They experimented with the position of
the different sizes of kidney stones in different parts of their kidney
model. On one ride, for example, the largest stone was placed in the
upper part of the kidney; on another, the large stone was placed in the
middle of the kidney. Ultimately, each stone was placed in each location
of the kidney for at least one ride.
The researchers noted that one aspect of the experiment that they could
not control was where they sat on the roller coaster. Indeed, "seat
assignment on the roller coaster was random and determined as a function
of place in the waiting line," they wrote.
But seat assignment turned out to be important. When the researchers
were seated in the rear car of the roller coaster, the kidney stones,
regardless of their size or location in the kidney, passed nearly 64
percent of the time, according to the study.
When the researchers sat in the front of the roller coaster, however,
the stones passed only about 17 percent of the time, the researchers
found.
The preliminary study's findings "support the anecdotal evidence that a
ride on a moderate-intensity roller coaster could benefit some patients
with small kidney stones," Dr. David Wartinger, a professor emeritus of
urology at the Michigan State University College of Osteopathic
Medicine and a co-author of the study, said in a statement.
Riding a roller coaster after having treatments such as lithotripsy — a
procedure that aims to break up kidney stones into smaller particles
using ultrasound shock waves — could prevent stones from getting larger
and causing additional problems, Wartinger said.
SOURCE:
LiveScience



No comments:
Post a Comment