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Ostomy Procedures Santa Fe NM

An ostomy is a surgical procedure performed when normal bowel or bladder function is lost due to birth defects, disease, treatment for disease, or injury. Conditions that may require an ostomy include colorectal cancer, traumatic injury to the bowel or bladder, diverticulitis, inflammatory bowel disease, and removal of the bladder.

Edward Joseph Bieniek, MD
505-954-8720
902 Allahna Way
Santa Fe, NM
Monty Woods, MD
608-935-9751
6 Camino Botanica
Santa Fe, NM
E Joseph Armbruster, MD FACS
505-466-1118
9 Vista Grande Dr
Santa Fe, NM
Raphael Isaiah Shapiro, MD
505-988-3975
490A W Zia Rd
Santa Fe, NM
Philo Calhoun
(505) 988-9821
1700 Cerrillos Rd
Santa Fe, NM
Timothy F Wetherill, MD
316-293-2665
701 Paseo de La Loma
Santa Fe, NM
Walter E Dickinson, MD FACS
505-489-1693
147 Gonzales Rd
Santa Fe, NM
Jorge Aquiles Lentino, MD
713-398-4649
3071 Plaza Blanca
Santa Fe, NM
Caesar Marcelo Ursic
(505) 954-8728
1631 Hospital Dr
Santa Fe, NM
John Dirk Wassner, MD
505-954-8720
465 Saint Michaels Dr Ste 110
Santa Fe, NM
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Ostomy Procedures - Colostomy, Ileostomy, Urostomy, Cystostomy

Overview

An ostomy is a surgical procedure performed when normal bowel or bladder function is lost due to birth defects, disease, treatment for disease, or injury. Conditions that may require an ostomy include colorectal cancer, traumatic injury to the bowel or bladder, diverticulitis, inflammatory bowel disease, and removal of the bladder. Cancer necessitates nearly 80% of ostomy procedures. Ostomy procedures are performed in a hospital and patients are admitted for several days or longer, depending on the severity of the condition and complications that occur.

An ostomy may be temporary or permanent. Temporary ostomies are created when the digestive tract must be allowed to heal without irritation caused by the passage of stool. The surgery allows the body's wastes

(e.g., stool, urine) to be expelled through an opening created in the abdomen. Types of ostomy procedures include colostomy, ileostomy, and urostomy. The type performed depends on the location and extent of the disease or injury. A person who has had ostomy surgery is an ostomate.

Types

Colostomy A colostomy involves creating an opening in the abdomen (ostomy) and pulling through a portion of the large intestine (colon). This is called a stoma and allows stool to pass directly out of the body, bypassing the diseased or damaged section of the colon. The consistency and frequency of the discharge from the stoma depends on the type of colostomy performed. There are four main types: ascending, transverse, descending, and sigmoid.

A colostomy is performed under general anesthesia, and the operating time varies according to the extent of the damage to the colon. Once the damaged section is located, the surgeon clamps both ends of the colon and brings one end out through the ostomy. This end becomes the stoma, and the other end of the colon remains clamped off. Sometimes the damaged section is removed.

Ascending colostomy —This procedure is performed in the ascending colon, on the right side of the abdomen. The stool that passes from this type is liquid to semiliquid and is rich in digestive enzymes. This discharge is often irritating to the skin around the stoma (peristomal skin).

Transverse colostomy —This procedure is performed in the transverse section of the colon, across the middle of the abdomen. Discharge from this type is usually liquid to semiformed in consistency and is less irritating to peristomal skin.

Descending colostomy —This type is performed in the descending portion of the colon, on the left side of the abdomen. Stool is semiformed to formed in consistency because most of the water has been absorbed as it moves through the ascending and transverse sections of the colon.

Sigmoid colostomy —This procedure is performed in the sigmoid colon, on the lower left side of the abdomen. Stool has a normal, formed consistency.

See also: Colostomy (more details)

Ileostomy An ileostomy is p...

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