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Have you considered giving up your J-pouch and returning to using a colestomy bag?

Yes, and I went ahead and got the reversal.
Yes, I've thought about it but not sure if I will do it.
No, I'm still focused on making my J-pouch work.
Posted by Hockadoo ·

Comments (65)

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I had a very steep learning curve with lots of life changes due to having a  j-pouch, but even still I am much stronger and healthier than before the j-pouch and I hope and pray that I never need to go back to the colestomy bag. 

 

I'm curious why this survey is being conducted?

 

Thank you

JenA

I continue to have pouchitis / cuffitis.  I have had my j-pouch for over a year, and it has definitely been a roller coaster.  I'm currently on weekly injections of Humira and I've been on prednisone since April.  Every time I try to tapper off the prednisone, I go into flare mode.

Wouldn't it be an ileostomy for us, not a colostomy?

 

My j-pouch went "floppy" after 15 years and I now have reduced function and a distended abdomen. My surgeon has offered me the option of having the pouch removed and reverting to an end ileostomy. Still trying to decide on that, although if the j-pouch gets worse the decision will be made for me.

 

The big downside of the ileostomy bag for me was the skin irritation (where the wafer adheres). I still wince if I think of it. Ouch!

Last edited by Kushami

Had the reversal in 1988 one year after ileostomy. At first wished I did not go for the reversal as pain of closure of ileostomy was awful but I'm sure I am the exception to the rule here. Overall very pleased but just have to watch what I eat. In the 28 years I have had, I have only has 1-2 bad stomach aches. No idea how long these ppunches are supposed to last but I think mine was a W or S pouch... Not sure.

Originally Posted by Hockadoo:

JenA - I posted survey because I'm currently considering such a reversal and want to get a feel for how often such a decision is made. Failure rate on J-pouches seems to be about 5 percent to 10 percent, so would expect results to closely reflect that. The middle answer is the interesting one. 

 

I have now had my J-Pouch for 25 years, 10 years in I acquired my first fistula and now have a total of 5. 2 bigger, 3 small. They are a pain in the butt and need a lot of care. Like most people commenting, I would not want to return to an ileostomy, even with my fistulas. I did do 8 months of remicade, 5 of those at a double dose - for some reason they thought the fistulas would close. I will not do that again or Humira as advised - these drugs have too many side effects that I have had to deal with.

The only reason why I was thinking about an ileostomy is at an overall check up and seeing if any new progress was happening with Crohn's at Cleveland Clinic, they had informed me of something new that they were seeing with long term Pouchers - Cancer in the pouch. Very aggressive, very non treatable. When I inquire about an ileostomy (which would be a way to avoid cancer), I'm told that they would not do it. Very complicated and the recovery is grueling.  Now the cancer fear is always in the back of my mind.

Have had it for about two years now. I've been having mild pouchitis lately that I'm trying to temper, but honestly, I feel like I had more PTSD from the 11 months of an ileostomy than from the 5 weeks in the hospital from a very serious acute onset of colitis. I despised the ileostomy, and the idea of having to go back leaves me at an absolute loss. I'd go through dozens of surgeries before I'd go for a permanent ileo.

Technically I guess I have thought about it, but I had such a bad time with my temporary ostomy that I hope to never go back. This despite bouts of pouchitis, unpredictable performance of the pouch, and never getting a full night's sleep. I guess this is the best of the challenging options. My uncle is a surgeon and says that many of his ostomy patients never want to be converted. I met a teenager who was so happy with his ostomy that he didn't ever want it taken down. I can't imagine being happy with an ostomy again, but the convenience it offers is appealing.

that option was also told to me  something i need to have a serious think about being only 18 years old and having to put up with the nasty effects from ulcerative colitis since the age of 6 , but new research is being investigated even as we speak there is a new one coming out soon for crohns disease ,  a 3 combined antibiotic therapy either already out or about to , so i think i will hang in there for a bit longer and see if a treatment option comes my way or if my J pouch will settle down on its own either way i do believe i will not have my pouch removed unless every single treatment was exhausted first .

I cannot imagine going back to an ileostomy.  For the three months I had mine I was in misery.  We were never able to find a wafer that did not leave my skin raw and bleeding, and because the site was so compromised the wafers would not stay attached Every change was agony.  I still have scars.
Nope, nada, never, noooo!

My pouch is 32+ years old, and I have only recently considered reversing it because I had a subdural hematoma (bleeding under the skull) caused by a combination of using blood thinners and having to push very hard sometimes to fully empty the pouch.  Stopping the bleeding required a craniotomy, which was not one of the things on my bucket list.  They basically cut off the top of your skull enough to stop the bleeding and then wash things out.  Much, much, worse than the ostomy.  I am off blood thinners now, but may eventually be faced with choosing the high risk of a stroke, or going back to having and end ileostomy.  I had one for 6 months before they created the j-pouch, leaving me with a loop ileostomy.  The loop is far worse than the end ostomy because of the skin irritation many of you mention.  A "well built" end ostomy sticks out just enough to make sure that what comes out drips into the bag and not on your skin.  I was so thrilled to be done with my sick colon that I would have been happy to live with the bag, even at age 22.  Of course, I knew that the j-pouch was the next step, so I guess its really hard to know for sure.  For now I will keep it, but I will keep talking to surgeon's about possibly un-doing it as the trade-off vs a stroke, and also just getting older need to be considered.  Recovery from surgery when you are 22, even a very sick and underweight 22, is much easier than it would be today at 55.  Waiting till I am 70 might not be the best idea.

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