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Apex Nursing

Reference — Gastrointestinal

Ostomy Basics

Quick reference for ostomy nursing care — colostomy, ileostomy, and urostomy output characteristics, stoma assessment, skin care, appliance management, and patient education.

Educational use only. This content is intended for nursing students and exam preparation. Always involve a wound, ostomy, and continence (WOC) nurse for complex ostomy management. This material supports nursing education and exam review. It is not medical advice and is not a substitute for clinical judgment, institutional policy, or medical direction. Always follow facility protocols and current provider orders.

Stoma Assessment — Normal vs Abnormal

FindingNormalReport to Provider
ColorRed or pink (well-perfused intestinal mucosa)Purple, black, or gray (ischemia/necrosis) — surgical emergency
AppearanceMoist, glistening mucosal surfaceDry, dull, or crusted (dehydration or necrosis)
SizeRound, symmetric; slight postoperative swelling resolving in 6–8 weeksRetraction below skin level or extreme prolapse (>5 cm protrusion)
BleedingMild oozing with appliance changes (mucosal fragility)Active bleeding or bleeding that does not stop with gentle pressure
Skin around stoma (peristomal)Intact, same color as surrounding skinRedness, erosion, maceration, bleeding — indicates leakage or contact dermatitis
Output color (colostomy)Brown stool consistent with segment locationBlack tarry stool (upper GI bleed) or frank blood
Output color (ileostomy)Yellow-green to brown liquidBloody, absence of output >4–6 hrs (obstruction)
Output color (urostomy)Clear yellow urine, mucous strands normalFrank blood, turbid, cloudy with odor (UTI or infection)
Colostomy

Surgical opening in the colon — brings a loop or end of the large intestine to the abdominal surface.

Common indicationsColorectal cancer; Diverticulitis with perforation (Hartmann's procedure); Bowel obstruction; Trauma; Volvulus; Hirschsprung's disease (pediatric)
LocationLeft lower quadrant most common (descending/sigmoid colostomy). Right side for transverse or ascending.
Output characterFormed to semi-formed stool (varies by location). Ascending colostomy: liquid/paste. Descending/sigmoid: formed.
Output amountVaries by diet. Descending/sigmoid: 1–2 formed stools per day. Ascending/transverse: 400–800 mL/day liquid
Stoma appearanceRed/pink, moist, round, slightly raised. Should protrude 1–2 cm. Mucosal lining is intestinal tissue.
Appliance managementDrainable pouch or closed-end pouch (for solid stool). Change every 3–7 days or as needed.
Skin concernsAlkaline stool can cause peristomal skin breakdown if leakage occurs. Peristomal hernia risk.
Ileostomy

Surgical opening in the ileum (small intestine) — most commonly an end ileostomy after total proctocolectomy, or a loop ileostomy for bowel rest.

Common indicationsUlcerative colitis (total proctocolectomy); Crohn's disease; Familial adenomatous polyposis (FAP); Colorectal cancer requiring total colectomy; Loop ileostomy to protect distal anastomosis or fistula
LocationRight lower quadrant (RLQ) — standard location. Stoma should protrude 2–3 cm (spout) to protect skin from liquid output.
Output characterLiquid to porridge consistency. Continuous drainage — no reservoir. High in digestive enzymes — VERY irritating to skin.
Output amount800–1200 mL/day (initial); adapts to 500–800 mL/day. Varies significantly with diet.
Stoma appearanceRed/pink, moist, should protrude 2–3 cm (spout formation reduces skin contact with alkaline output).
Appliance managementTwo-piece or one-piece drainable system. Empty when 1/3 to 1/2 full. Change appliance every 3–5 days.
Skin concernsHIGH risk of peristomal skin breakdown — enzymatic liquid output is highly corrosive. Meticulous skin barrier essential. Protective skin barrier paste/powder recommended.
Urostomy (Ileal Conduit)

Urinary diversion — a segment of ileum is isolated to create a conduit that diverts urine from the ureters to the abdominal surface. Also called an ileal conduit.

Common indicationsBladder cancer requiring cystectomy; Neurogenic bladder (refractory to conservative management); Bladder exstrophy; Severe radiation cystitis; Traumatic bladder injury
LocationRight lower quadrant. Stoma should protrude 1–2 cm. May have mucous threads in urine output (from ileal segment — normal).
Output characterUrine — clear to yellow. Mucus threads are normal from the ileal segment. Should NOT be bloody (except immediately postoperative).
Output amountContinuous urine drainage — approximately 1–2 mL/kg/hr (normal urine output). No voluntary control.
Stoma appearanceRed/pink, moist. Mucus from ileal segment visible in output is normal. Stoma should be round and symmetrical.
Appliance managementUrinary pouch with drainage valve. Empty frequently (every 3–4 hours). Night drainage bag recommended to prevent backflow. Change every 3–5 days.
Skin concernsUrine is acidic and irritating to skin. Ammonia from urine can cause crystal deposits on stoma (white crystals). Treat with dilute white vinegar soaks.

Patient Education Priorities

Appliance Care

  • Empty pouch when 1/3 to 1/2 full
  • Change appliance every 3–7 days (per type)
  • Measure stoma opening — size changes in first 6 weeks
  • Cut skin barrier within 1/8 inch of stoma base

Peristomal Skin Care

  • Cleanse skin with warm water and mild soap
  • Pat dry thoroughly before applying new appliance
  • Use skin barrier paste or powder for irritated skin
  • Assess peristomal skin at every pouch change

Diet Considerations

  • Ileostomy: avoid foods causing blockage (corn, nuts, skins, popcorn)
  • Colostomy: normal diet typically; note gas-producing foods
  • Odor-reducing foods: yogurt, buttermilk, parsley
  • Urostomy: cranberry juice helps reduce crystal formation, maintain pH

When to Call Provider

  • No output for >4–6 hours (obstruction)
  • Purple or black stoma (ischemia)
  • Peristomal skin breakdown with pain
  • High ileostomy output >1200 mL/day (dehydration risk)
  • Signs of infection around stoma site

Related Resources

Standards & sources

Fact-checked Jun 21, 2026

This page is written to align with American College of Gastroenterology (ACG) / AGA · ASPEN (nutrition support). It is an educational summary, not a citation of any single document — always verify specific doses, values, and protocols against current guidelines and your facility policy. How we source content →