Ostomy complications: Difference between revisions
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==Background== | ==Background== | ||
*Ostomies (colostomy, ileostomy, urostomy) are common, and patients frequently present to the ED with complications<ref>Parini D, et al. Surgical management of ostomy complications: a MISSTO-WSES mapping review. World J Emerg Surg. 2023 Oct 10;18(1):48. PMID 37817218</ref> | |||
*Types: colostomy (most common), ileostomy (higher output, more dehydration risk), urostomy | |||
*Key EM pearl: ileostomy patients are at high risk for '''dehydration and electrolyte derangements''' due to high-volume liquid output<ref>Babakhanlou R, et al. Stoma-related complications and emergencies. Int J Emerg Med. 2022 May 9;15(1):17. PMID 35534817</ref> | |||
==Complications== | |||
== | ===Parastomal Hernia=== | ||
*Most common long-term complication | |||
*Bulge around stoma that may reduce spontaneously | |||
*If reducible and nontender: outpatient surgery referral | |||
*If incarcerated/strangulated: nausea, vomiting, non-functioning stoma → emergent surgical consultation | |||
===Stomal Prolapse=== | |||
*Telescoping of bowel through stoma — can appear dramatic but is often reducible | |||
*Apply sugar to edematous stoma to reduce swelling, then gently reduce | |||
*Surgical consultation if unable to reduce or if signs of ischemia (dusky/black color) | |||
== | ===Stomal Retraction/Stenosis=== | ||
*Stoma retracts below skin level or narrows | |||
*Difficult appliance management, obstruction risk | |||
*Surgical referral for revision | |||
===Obstruction=== | |||
*High-output stoma that suddenly stops functioning | |||
*Abdominal distension, nausea/vomiting, cramping | |||
*Abdominal X-ray or CT to evaluate | |||
*Management similar to [[small bowel obstruction]]: NPO, NG tube, IV fluids | |||
*Surgical consultation | |||
== | ===Peristomal Skin Breakdown=== | ||
=== | *Irritant contact dermatitis from effluent exposure (especially ileostomy — alkaline output) | ||
*Candidal infection (satellite lesions) | |||
*Allergic contact dermatitis (from appliance adhesive) | |||
*Management: barrier creams/powders, proper appliance fitting, treat infection | |||
===Stomal Ischemia/Necrosis=== | |||
*Stoma appears dark, dusky, or black | |||
*If only superficial: observation with close follow-up | |||
*If necrosis extends below fascia: emergent surgical consultation (risk of peritonitis) | |||
===Dehydration / Electrolyte Derangements=== | |||
*Especially with '''ileostomies''' — can lose 1-2L/day | |||
*High output: >1.5 L/day warrants evaluation | |||
*Risk of hyponatremia, hypokalemia, metabolic acidosis, AKI | |||
*Aggressive IV fluid resuscitation, electrolyte replacement | |||
=== | ===Bleeding=== | ||
*Minor stomal bleeding (trauma from appliance): direct pressure, silver nitrate | |||
*GI bleeding through stoma: evaluate as any GI bleed — CBC, type and screen, GI consultation | |||
== | ===Infection=== | ||
*Peristomal cellulitis or abscess | |||
*Antibiotics; I&D if abscess present | |||
==Evaluation== | |||
*Stomal assessment: color (should be pink/red), output, surrounding skin | |||
*[[BMP]]: electrolytes, renal function (especially ileostomy patients) | |||
*[[CBC]] if concern for bleeding or infection | |||
*Abdominal X-ray or CT if obstruction or peritonitis suspected | |||
*Stool studies if infectious diarrhea suspected (high-output colostomy) | |||
==Disposition== | ==Disposition== | ||
*Admit: obstruction, stomal necrosis below fascia, incarcerated hernia, significant dehydration/AKI, GI bleeding | |||
*Discharge: reducible prolapse, minor skin breakdown, mild dehydration corrected in ED, minor bleeding | |||
*Ostomy nurse referral for appliance issues and skin management | |||
==See Also== | ==See Also== | ||
*[[Post-surgical complications]] | *[[Post-surgical complications]] | ||
*[[Small bowel obstruction]] | |||
*[[G-tube complications]] | |||
==External Links== | ==External Links== | ||
==References== | ==References== | ||
<references/> | <references/> | ||
[[Category:GI]] | |||
[[Category:Surgery]] | |||
Latest revision as of 10:56, 22 March 2026
Background
- Ostomies (colostomy, ileostomy, urostomy) are common, and patients frequently present to the ED with complications[1]
- Types: colostomy (most common), ileostomy (higher output, more dehydration risk), urostomy
- Key EM pearl: ileostomy patients are at high risk for dehydration and electrolyte derangements due to high-volume liquid output[2]
Complications
Parastomal Hernia
- Most common long-term complication
- Bulge around stoma that may reduce spontaneously
- If reducible and nontender: outpatient surgery referral
- If incarcerated/strangulated: nausea, vomiting, non-functioning stoma → emergent surgical consultation
Stomal Prolapse
- Telescoping of bowel through stoma — can appear dramatic but is often reducible
- Apply sugar to edematous stoma to reduce swelling, then gently reduce
- Surgical consultation if unable to reduce or if signs of ischemia (dusky/black color)
Stomal Retraction/Stenosis
- Stoma retracts below skin level or narrows
- Difficult appliance management, obstruction risk
- Surgical referral for revision
Obstruction
- High-output stoma that suddenly stops functioning
- Abdominal distension, nausea/vomiting, cramping
- Abdominal X-ray or CT to evaluate
- Management similar to small bowel obstruction: NPO, NG tube, IV fluids
- Surgical consultation
Peristomal Skin Breakdown
- Irritant contact dermatitis from effluent exposure (especially ileostomy — alkaline output)
- Candidal infection (satellite lesions)
- Allergic contact dermatitis (from appliance adhesive)
- Management: barrier creams/powders, proper appliance fitting, treat infection
Stomal Ischemia/Necrosis
- Stoma appears dark, dusky, or black
- If only superficial: observation with close follow-up
- If necrosis extends below fascia: emergent surgical consultation (risk of peritonitis)
Dehydration / Electrolyte Derangements
- Especially with ileostomies — can lose 1-2L/day
- High output: >1.5 L/day warrants evaluation
- Risk of hyponatremia, hypokalemia, metabolic acidosis, AKI
- Aggressive IV fluid resuscitation, electrolyte replacement
Bleeding
- Minor stomal bleeding (trauma from appliance): direct pressure, silver nitrate
- GI bleeding through stoma: evaluate as any GI bleed — CBC, type and screen, GI consultation
Infection
- Peristomal cellulitis or abscess
- Antibiotics; I&D if abscess present
Evaluation
- Stomal assessment: color (should be pink/red), output, surrounding skin
- BMP: electrolytes, renal function (especially ileostomy patients)
- CBC if concern for bleeding or infection
- Abdominal X-ray or CT if obstruction or peritonitis suspected
- Stool studies if infectious diarrhea suspected (high-output colostomy)
Disposition
- Admit: obstruction, stomal necrosis below fascia, incarcerated hernia, significant dehydration/AKI, GI bleeding
- Discharge: reducible prolapse, minor skin breakdown, mild dehydration corrected in ED, minor bleeding
- Ostomy nurse referral for appliance issues and skin management
