Many diseases experience varying degrees of relief in the summer, such as high blood pressure and coronary heart disease, for example, but there is one type of disease that is most likely to strike, or take shape, in the summer. This is urinary stones. We drink a lot of water every day, and this water is circulated and metabolized in the body, and finally discharged from the body through our breathing, skin, urine, etc., of which urination is of course the big head. But many people will find themselves in the summer, urine significantly reduced – the reason for this is also easy to understand, the heat sweating, drinking water if about the same, from the sweat lost more, from the urine discharged naturally will be reduced. But the problems associated with reduced urine are numerous. Urine is the product of our body’s metabolism, it can take away our body’s metabolic “waste”, in the process of urination will also play a flushing effect, which can be a lot of harmful microorganisms “flushing” away, equivalent to a self-cleaning process. However, urine itself is also a medium for harmful microorganisms. If it is not excreted in time, but stored in the bladder, it may allow harmful vitamins – especially many bacteria – to “take the opportunity” to multiply, resulting in inflammation of the urinary system. Such as cystitis, ureteritis, pyelonephritis, etc., may be born from this. In addition, summer sweating, reduced urine volume, urine concentration, which in turn makes it easier to form crystals. Combined with the effects of urinary tract infections, urinary stones can easily appear. Remember: make sure to drink more water, around 2,500 ml per day. Therefore, summer is definitely the “golden season” for urinary stones, and young people are the absolute main force. Stones can be found in any part of the kidney, bladder, ureter and urethra, but kidney stones and ureteral stones are the most common. In fact, these disorders may be essentially the same type of problem, except that the stones appear in different locations and therefore have different crown names. The high prevalence of the disorder is between the ages of 25-40 years, and urinary tract infections, congenital malformations, and metabolic disorders may all lead to stone formation.