If your hernia is large, you may experience a dull ache or dragging sensation particularly after the stoma has been active. You skin may start to feel thinner and stretched and may tear easier when removing your bag.
When the skin around the stoma is very red and wet. There might even be blood and pain. This is due to irritated skin from feces or certain ostomy products like pastes or solvents. To avoid this, make sure to measure your stoma and cut your barrier to the correct size (1/8" bigger than the stoma).
The first sign of a stoma infection may be a pus-like discharge, unusual swelling, increasing redness, or color changes. Some may notice an abscess or an ulcer. A Wound, Ostomy, and Continence Nurse (WOCN) or your doctor will be the best source for medical advice on this issue.
This pain is often due to intercostal nerves caught in scar tissue or even stitched when the surgeon closes the site. This can lead to irritation and inflammation that produces a burning or stabbing sensation in the area of the colostomy site. Most people experience radiating pain from the abdominal wall to the side.
A partial blockage usually displays itself through cramping abdominal pain, watery output with a foul odour, and possible abdominal distension and swelling of the stoma followed by nausea and vomiting.
When the skin becomes infected it can start to look inflamed and the infection tends to cause some swelling around your stoma. The skin colour often changes from a healthy pink/reddish colour, to pale, bluish purple or even black. If there is any discharge of blood or pus this is often a definitive sign of infection.
Signs of Stoma Problems
The stoma is no longer beefy red or pink but pale in appearance. The stoma is no longer moist in appearance but seems dry. Your stoma turns dark red, purple, or even black in color. Your stool from the stoma is always watery or diarrhea.
Occasionally most people with a stoma will experience some minor issues which may cause discomfort such as leaks and sore skin, granulomas, retracted stomas, constipation, hernias, or prolapsed stomas.
Some common complications of stoma include poor siting, parastomal hernia (PH), prolapse, retraction, ischemia/necrosis, peristomal dermatologic problems, mucocutaneous separation, and pyoderma gangrenosum. Each will be discussed separately in further detail.
Spontaneous stoma closure is a rare and interesting event. The exact etiology for spontaneous closure remains unknown, but it may be hypothesized to result from slow retraction of the stoma, added to the concept of a tendency towards spontaneous closure of enterocutaneous fistula.
Your Recovery
After a colostomy, you can expect to feel better and stronger each day. But you may get tired quickly at first. Your belly may be sore, and you will probably need pain medicine for a week or two.
Aside from physical impact (a hard fall, etc.) your bag bursts because of excessive gas accumulation.
A healthy stoma is pinkish-red and moist. Your stoma should stick out slightly from your skin. It is normal to see a little mucus. Spots of blood or a small amount of bleeding from your stoma is also normal.
Contact your physician if you experience any of these stoma complications: The stoma turns from its normal red color to a very pale pink, bluish purple or black color. An abnormal bulge is visible near or underneath the stoma. The effluent (output) drains from anywhere other than the stoma.
Try several different body positions, such as a knee-chest position, or lie on the side of your stoma with knees bent, as it might help move the blockage forward. Massage the abdominal area and the area around your stoma. Most food blockages occur just below the stoma and this may help dislodge the blockage.
Stoma necrosis presents as a stoma that appears either ischemic (dark red, purplish tint or cyanotic hue discoloration), or necrotic brown or black. The stoma may be flaccid or hard and dry. Necrosis may be circumferential or scattered on the mucosa and may be superficial or deep.
Stoma complications
Urostomy complications include stomal retraction, stenosis or obstruction, herniation, prolapse, and peristomal skin irritation [28, 33]. Most cases will occur within 2 years post-surgery.
Symptoms of a stoma hernia
A bulge behind your stoma. Discomfort or pain around your stoma, this is often described as a “dragging sensation” Issues with keeping your stoma bag in place. Bloating.
What is pancaking? Pancaking occurs if the internal layers of the stoma bag stick together causing a vacuum which prevents the contents from dropping to the bottom. The stool remains at the top of the stoma bag which can potentially block the filter. The bag can also be forced off the body.
Bending. It's near enough in possible to do gardening without having to bend down. This is fine, but you can bend down in a way that reduces the risk of injuring your stomach muscles and stoma area. For example, rather than bending over at your waist, try bending down slowly at your knees.
Ballooning occurs when your stoma bag blows up with wind. This is usually due to the filter becoming wet or blocked from stoma output. This can cause the bag to come away from the body. Please note: Stoma ballooning can happen with a colostomy or occasionally with an ileostomy.
Most stoma pouches have charcoal filters built into the bag. These allow the wind to be released. However, if the filter capacity cannot handle the amount of wind produced, or if the filter has become wet or blocked by the stoma output, ballooning can occur.
Most commonly with an ileostomy, redness to the skin around the stoma, accompanied by burning and itching, is the result of stool having direct contact with the skin. Stool from an ileostomy is corrosive and can cause damage to the skin within a short period of time.