No, this IS NOT an onion – it’s the world’s largest kidney stone ever! Retired Sri Lankan soldier, 62, has mass 5 inches long by 4 inches wide weighing 800 grams pulled from him
- It weighed a whopping 800 grams – about the same as an eight-week-old kitten
- The double record-breaking find was 13.37 cm long and 10.55 cm wide
A Sri Lankan man has broken the world record for the largest kidney stone ever.
Retired soldier Canistus Coonghe’s huge mass, which looked like an onion, was even larger than his actual kidney.
Guinness World Records claimed it to be 13.37 cm (5.26 in) long and 10.55 cm (4.15 in) wide.
And the 62-year-old’s kidney stone weighed 800 grams. This is about the same as a loaf of bread or a large box of cereal.
It makes Mr. Coonghe’s mass the largest and heaviest on record.
It weighed a whopping 800 grams, which is about the same as an eight week old kitten
Canistus Coonghe has broken two world records after army surgeon Dr. Kugadas Sutharshan, center of picture, removed a kidney stone measuring 13.37 cm long and 10.55 cm wide
Doctors at the army hospital in Colombo, Sri Lanka, said that despite it being in his right kidney, his organs were working surprisingly well
Dr. Kugadas Sutharshan, the surgeon who removed it during surgery on June 1 at the army hospital in Colombo, said that despite it being in his right kidney, his organs were working properly.
Surgeons didn’t say if it hurt him. But even small ones can be painful.
Kidney stones are usually no bigger than a small stone and can usually be passed in your pee. They consist of minerals such as calcium.
About one in ten people will get kidney stones at some point in their life.
Pain is felt as they pass through the ureters from the kidneys to the bladder. Without treatment, they can cause infections and damage the organ.
One way to deal with this is the so-called ‘conservative’ treatment, where nature takes its course.
The grueling operation removed Canistus Coonghe’s stone (pictured on the bed) through an incision in the pelvis of his kidney
Surgeons didn’t say if it hurt him. But even small ones can be painful
Patients are given pain medication, but otherwise told to go away, grin and put up with it.
Other methods include surgical removal or blowing them up with high-frequency shock waves to shatter them into small fragments. The method chosen often depends on how big the stones are and where they are placed.
People can reduce the risk of kidney stones by drinking plenty of water and making sure their urine is pale in color – a signal that they are well hydrated.
The previous record for the heaviest kidney stone, 1.36 pounds, was set by a Pakistani man in 2008.
Meanwhile, the longest measures 5.11 inches. It was surgically removed from an Indian man in 2004.