Urostomy Surgery
Urostomy is
a surgical process that allows the urine to come out through an artificial
opening stoma. The operation allows the urine the go pass the bladder and
urethra.
Causes of Urostomy Surgery
The
following are the causes of urostomy:
- Bladder cancer.
- Chronic inflammation.
- Neurological bladder dysfunction.
- Malfunction of the kidney.
- Infection in the kidney.
- Injury in the bladder or urethra.
- Defect in the ureter or urethra.
The procedure of a Urostomy Surgery
In the
urostomy operation, the doctors have to remove the ureters from the bladder.
During the surgery, surgeons make an opening in the abdomen. After the
operation, the stoma (opening) collects the urine. The process of the flowing
of the urine does not change. It remains to evacuate through the ureter and
collects in a bag which affixes to the opening (stoma). During the operation,
doctors can remove the bladder, it depends on the type of disease.
Urostomy surgery is the least common type of the three primary kinds of stoma. The only purpose of the urostomy is to pass the urine from the body, through an artificial process. the urine collects in the stoma bag which attaches to the abdomen wall. In the operation, a small section of the bowel uses as a conduit (a path), sometimes the ileum (an ileum conduit). Usually, doctors put stents in situ to prevent the anastomosis between the ureter and bowel through a process called stenosis. The sensing occurs during the urostomy surgery. The urostomy operation is al usually permanent end stoma.
When it
comes to appropriate appliances for the urostomy stoma. Doctors and nurses
always recommend a drainable pouch. You can clean and wash the stoma bag
through normal tap water. A patient should empty and clean the pouch five to
six times daily. If you do not empty your stoma bag on time, it may leak and
release the bad odor. The stoma pouch has a maximum capacity of 400ml, it
cannot collect the liquid more than it. Therefore, it starts leaking and makes
you embarrassed in public.
Types of Urostomy Surgery
The
following are the three main types of urostomy surgery:
- Ileal conduit.
- Colon conduit.
- Ureterostomy.
Ileostomy Conduit
In the
ileostomy conduit, procedure doctors resect the minor segment of the ileum and
create a small opening in the belly wall called a stoma. In the operation,
surgeons attach only one segment of the ileum (small intestine) to the stoma
and connect the remaining portion of the small intestine by sewing to the two
ureters. The surgery stops the passage between the ureter and the bladder.
After the operation, urine can flow directly from the kidney and collects it
into the stoma. The urine passes to the stoma through the ileal conduit which
has created by the doctors. The ileal conduit only allows the urine to pass,
the remaining undigested material pass through the sewed intestine.
Colon Conduit
The surgery
procedure and purpose are the same in the colon conduit. The only difference is
doctors create the conduit in the colon segment. In the colon conduit, surgeons
have to make a larger stoma in the lower abdomen wall. Therefore, the size of
the stoma pouch is larger in diameters than the ileal conduit.
Ureterostomy
In the
ureterostomy operation, the doctors have to create one or two stomas in the
belly wall. Surgeons have to connect each ureter to the abdomen. When a doctor
links the ureters with each other internally, it is called
transureteroureterostomy. One ureter creates the stoma on the outer wall of the
patient. Therefore, it requires one stoma pouch which attaches to the outer
stoma that collects the urine and liquid fluid. When doctors create two stomas
on the outside of the abdomen, it is called bilateral ureterostomy, and it
requires two stoma bags to collect the waste fluid from
the body.
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