The
surgeon removes the
large intestine (colon) and creates a pouch and a valve from the lower end of
the small intestine (the ileum). The surgeon then connects the valve to an
opening (stoma) in the skin of the lower abdomen. After this surgery, you can
insert a tube into the valve to release stool from the intestines.
The main complications are incontinence of gas
and stool and inflammation of the ileal pouch (pouchitis) that attaches to the
opening in the abdomen.1
Up to 50% of people develop some fecal
incontinence, usually in the first year after surgery. The risk is highest for
obese older men who had a traditional ileostomy that was modified to a
continent ileostomy.
About 30% of people develop inflammation of
the ileal pouch (pouchitis), which usually can be treated with
antibiotics.
Cima RR, Pemberton JH (2006). Ileostomy, colostomy, and pouches. In M Feldman et al., eds., Sleisenger and Fordtran's Gastrointestinal and Liver Disease, 8th ed., vol. 2, pp.
2549–2561. Philadelphia: Saunders Elsevier.
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