Also, it is normal to smell your ostomy output and gas when you are changing your ostomy bag. As you would if you went to the toilet the standard way to poo, it's natural for it to have a smell... After all, it is waste from your digestive system!
If you do notice a smell from your bag, you should check it as there may be a leak under the flange and the bag will need changing. It is normal for the smell of the bag contents to differ from what you were used to before your surgery because part of the bowel has been removed.
With the right ostomy supplies, you should only notice odors when changing out or draining your pouching system. However, if you're noticing some offensive smells more frequently, it's time to find the potential cause.
People with a stoma smell
You might notice the smell when changing your bag in the toilet - but it would be no different from anyone else using the loo. It is believed that this myth came about because early ostomy supplies were not odour-proof. However, with modern stoma bags there should not be any smell at all.
Use Deodorizing Products.
You can also try ostomy filters that attach to the pouch and reduce gas and odors. Some ostomy pouches come with filters already in the appliance. You can also carry a deodorant spray. If you have to empty your pouch in a public restroom, the spray can mask any odor.
The pouches are odor-free, and they do not allow gas or stool to leak out when they are worn correctly. Your nurse will teach you how to care for your ostomy pouch and how to change it. You will need to empty it when it is about 1/3 full, and change it about every 2 to 4 days, or as often as your nurse tells you.
You may notice more odor when you empty your pouch after you eat certain foods. Some of these foods are onions, garlic, broccoli, asparagus, cabbage, fish, certain cheeses, eggs, baked beans, Brussels sprouts, and alcohol.
Clean the pouch
Wipe the inside and outside of the tail with toilet paper. This helps prevent any odor. Check both sides of the pouch for tears or holes. If you find any, put on a new pouch.
Can you still poop with a colostomy bag? Pooping will be different with a colostomy bag. Immediately after your surgery, your anus may continue to expel poop and other fluids that were left inside. But new poop will now exit through your stoma.
Rinsing your ostomy bag
After you've cleared your bag from all its contents (with a good aim, hopefully), you can rinse the bag with water.
You should obviously handle your stoma with care, but there is no need to be afraid of touching it. To clean it, simply use tap water and soft medical wipes or soft cotton wool. The stoma and the skin around it doesn't need soap for cleansing, and in fact, soap could irritate it - as could baby wipes.
As the pouch is emptied of its contents, the stool, be it liquid or pasty, is plopped into the water and often times will float a while before sinking. Because the stool is softer and slower to sink it allows for greater amounts of gaseous diffusion or escape of odor offending molecules to occur.
Most people with stomas may have to go through a stoma infection. However, it is a possibility that anyone with a stoma should know about it. The first sign of a stoma infection may be a pus-like discharge, unusual swelling, increasing redness, or color changes.
What is ballooning? Ballooning occurs when your stoma bag blows up with wind. This is usually due to the filter becoming wet or blocked from stoma output.
The easiest way to clean your stoma site is to gently wash it with warm water using the dry wipes provided and then pat dry thoroughly using a clean dry wipe. Avoid using paper towels as these can get stuck to the stoma, always use dry cotton wipes.
If your current stoma bag has a filter and you are still experiencing ballooning problems, it may be suffering from excess wind. Spicy foods, some particular vegetables (onions, cabbages, peas, and beans) and fizzy drinks have been known to increase wind, so we would recommend avoiding these in your diet.
Foods and drinks that can increase the wind passed by your stoma include beans, beer, broccoli, brussel sprouts, cabbage, carbonated drinks, cauliflower, cucumber, eggs, fruit, green vegetables, mushrooms, nuts, onions, peas, spinach, sweet corn, fatty foods (pan- fried or deep-fried foods) and rich creamy foods.
The BBC Radio 1 presenter had a stoma bag, which she refers to as Audrey, fitted last October after being diagnosed with bowel cancer. The operation diverts one end of the colon, which is part of the bowel, through an opening in the abdomen called a stoma.
A colostomy is an operation to create an opening (stoma) of the large bowel (colon) onto the surface of the tummy (abdomen). Your poo no longer passes out of your body through your back passage. Instead, it passes out through the stoma. You wear a bag that sticks onto the skin over the stoma to collect your poo.
Many people enjoy leaving their skin uncovered for 15 to 30 minutes after taking their pouching system off. This is called a skin break. Taking a skin break can help with irritation or keep it from happening. You can decide if you want to take a skin break.
What to do when you experience ballooning. If ballooning does occur, you can release the gas from the pouch in the privacy of a toilet, if you use an open bag or use a two-piece system. Changing the pouch if the filter blocks can also help prevent ballooning.
If you normally eat later in the evening or soon before you go to bed, this could be increasing your night time output. If this sounds like you, then varying your meal times could help to reduce stoma bag leakages during the night as your stoma is less active.
You may get the sensation that you still need to pass a bowel movement even though there is nothing there. This is called phantom rectum. For most of us, the pain will gradually disappear but for others, it will persist after you have healed.