This image is a classic example of health misinformation / clickbait advertising, and the claims in it are not medically supported.
Why the claims are false:
1. “Repair your kidneys while you sleep”
- Kidneys don’t “repair” from a drink overnight in that way.
- Kidney function depends on underlying disease, hydration, blood pressure control, infection treatment, etc.
2. “Dissolves kidney stones”
- Kidney stones are mineral crystals (calcium oxalate, uric acid, etc.).
- There is no drink, smoothie, or food that dissolves established stones in the body.
- Some stones may pass naturally if small, but that’s not the same as being “dissolved.”
3. “Flushes toxins / sand”
- “Toxins” is a vague marketing word here.
- Kidneys already filter waste continuously; no juice “cleans” them.
4. “Relieves UTIs”
- UTIs are bacterial infections.
- They usually require antibiotics, not home drinks.
- Untreated UTIs can spread to the kidneys and become serious.
5. “Before and after kidney transformation” image
- This is digitally created or symbolic, not medical imaging.
- Real kidneys do not change appearance like that from a drink.
What this is actually doing
This kind of post is designed to:
- Trigger fear about health (“your kidneys are damaged”)
- Offer a “simple recipe” as a solution
- Encourage engagement (“say OK”)
- Sell a fake or exaggerated cure concept
Reality-based takeaway
- Healthy habits (hydration, balanced diet, medical care when needed) support kidney health.
- But no single drink or recipe can cure kidney disease, dissolve stones, or treat infections.
If you want, I can tell you what actually works for:
- preventing kidney stones (real evidence-based diet changes)
- reducing UTI risk safely
- protecting kidney health long-term without myths