Before the procedure
A healthcare professional sees you before your surgery to mark the ileostomy site for the short-term ileostomy. Several factors affect where the site is.
These factors include your natural skin folds, the muscles in your abdomen, any scars you have, where your bellybutton is, waistline and hipbone, and being able to see the site when you sit. Choosing the right place for the ileostomy makes it easier to care for the ileostomy after surgery.
Food and medicines
Before your surgery, talk with your healthcare professional about your use of caffeine, alcohol, tobacco or other drugs. Using any of these before or after surgery may affect how you heal and recover.
During the procedure
When they can, surgeons do J-pouch surgery with minimally invasive methods. These are called laparoscopic methods. With these methods, instead of making a large cut, a surgeon makes smaller cuts in the belly area. These cuts are called incisions.
The surgeon then guides surgical tools through the incisions. One of the tools is a long, narrow tube with a camera at its tip, called a laparoscope.
Some laparoscopic J-pouch surgery is done using robotic techniques.
J-pouch surgery is most often done in two surgeries. During the first surgery, the surgeon:
- Removes the colon and rectum. The ring-shaped muscle, called the anal sphincter, and the anus, stay at the end of the rectum.
- Makes a pouch shaped like the letter J from the end of the small intestine and attaches it to the anus.
- Makes a short-term opening in the abdominal wall, called a stoma, for getting rid of waste.
You heal for about 2 to 3 months. Then the surgeon does the second surgery to close the ileostomy. This lets you pass stool as usual.
After the procedure
You spend a brief time in the hospital to heal and learn how to care for your ileostomy. You need to wear an ostomy bag that collects your stool until you have the next surgery.
Your healthcare professional may tell you to drink a lot of fluids. Water or drinks that replace certain minerals in the body called electrolytes will help keep you from getting dehydrated.
You may get pain medicines or antibiotics after the surgery. Your healthcare professional also might suggest anti-diarrhea medicines or fiber supplements.
There's no special diet for people who have had J-pouch surgery. Some foods, such as beans and cabbage, might cause gas or diarrhea. Alcohol might do the same.
You might try to eat small amounts of foods you like to see how they affect you. If your stool is watery, eat foods that help thicken stool, such as applesauce, bananas or peanut butter.
For about 4 to 6 weeks after J-pouch surgery, don't lift anything or do activities that strain the body. After that, being active can help the healing process. Most often you can return to the activities you did before surgery.