Calcium
oxylate stones can not be dissolved with diet and have to be removed surgically.
IF they are the Calcium
oxylate stones, Prescription diets do NOT help with that.
Calcium
oxylate stones are not dissolvable and usually require surgical removal in male cats.
Not exact matches
Spinach, beets, chard, sweet potatoes and tea are very rich in
oxylates which make up the most common
stones.
After the
stones came out they measured my
oxylates in my urine and said they were quite high.
Types of bladder
stones include struvite, calcium
oxylate, urate, cystine, calcium phosphate, and silicate
stones.
Left untreated, Cushing's disease can result in diabetes, calcium
oxylate bladder
stones and pulmonary embolism.
Dietary therapy can dissolve struvite
stones, but not those consisting of calcium
oxylate.