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Iced
Tea may raise your risk of painful Kidney
Stones, Urologist Warns
Newswise, July 2010 — Mark Mulac was an
“avid lover” of iced tea, downing up to six
glasses a day of the popular summertime
thirst-quencher.
Unfortunately, for health reasons, Mulac has
been forced to go cold turkey. All the iced
tea he was downing helped to bring on an
excruciating bout of kidney stones that
eventually led to surgery at Loyola
University Hospital in Maywood, Ill.
“I was a junkie on a bender. I had to have
it every day,” said Mulac, a resident of
Brookfield, Ill. “Iced tea was very
refreshing, cheap to buy and easy to make.”
“The pain was so bad that once it felt like
I was delivering a child made out of razor
blades,” said the 48-year-old Mulac. “I
really had no idea that iced tea could lead
to that.”
Iced tea contains high concentrations of
oxalate, one of the key chemicals that lead
to the formation of kidney stones, a common
disorder of the urinary tract that affects
about 10 percent of the population in the
United States. Though hot tea also contains
oxalate, it isn’t as easy to consume a
quantity large enough amount to encourage
the formation of stones.
“For many people, iced tea is potentially
one of the worst things they can drink,”
said Dr. John Milner, assistant professor,
Department of Urology, Loyola University
Chicago Stritch School of Medicine, Maywood,
Ill. “For people who have a tendency to form
kidney stones, it’s definitely one of the
worst things you can drink.”
Kidney stones are a common disorder of the
urinary tract that affects about 10 percent
of the population in the United States. Men
are four times more likely to develop kidney
stones than women, and the risk rises
dramatically once they reach their 40s.
Postmenopausal women with low estrogen
levels and women who have had their ovaries
removed also have an increased risk of
developing stones.
Kidney stones are small crystals that form
from the minerals and salt normally found in
the urine in the kidneys or ureters, the
small tubes that drain urine from the kidney
to the bladder. Most of the time kidney
stones are so small that they are harmlessly
expelled from the body. But on some
occasions, the stones grow to the point that
they can become lodged in the ureters.
The most common cause of kidney stones is
the failure to drink enough fluids. During
the summer, people are generally more
dehydrated due to sweating. The dehydration
combined with increased iced tea consumption
raises the risk of kidney stones, especially
in people who are prone to develop them.
“People are told that in the summertime they
should drink more fluids,” said Milner, who
treated Mulac’s kidney stones. “A lot of
people choose to drink more iced tea,
thinking it’s a tastier alternative.
However, in terms of kidney stones, they’re
actually doing themselves a disservice.”
The popularity of iced tea has grown
dramatically with more than 2 billon gallons
consumed a year in the U.S., according to
the Tea Association of the U.S.A. Nearly 128
Americans drink the beverage daily.
Much of iced tea’s appeal is due to the
belief that it is healthier than other
beverages such as soda and beer.
“I stayed away from carbonated drinks for a
long time because I thought it was upsetting
my stomach and that it wasn’t as good for
me, but I guess overdid it with the iced
tea,” Mulac said.
To quench thirst and to properly hydrate,
there is no better alternative than water,
Milner said. You might try flavoring it with
lemon slices. Lemonade helps to ward off
kidney stones.
“Lemons are very high in citrates, which
inhibit the growth of kidney stones,” Milner
said. “Lemonade, not the powdered variety
that uses artificial flavoring, actually
slows the development of kidney stones for
those who are prone to the development of
kidney stones.”
Milner also said people concerned about
developing kidney stones should cut back on
eating foods that also contain high
concentrations of oxalates such as spinach,
chocolate, rhubarb and nuts. They should
ease up on salt, eat meat sparingly, drink
several glasses of water a day and eat foods
that are high in calcium, which reduces the
amount of oxalate the body absorbs