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The frequency of early stomal, peristomal and skin complications

Andrea Maglio, Alessandro Pasquale Malvone, Vitalba Scaduto, Davide Brambilla, Francesco Carlo Denti

2021British Journal of Nursing37 citationsDOI

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The incidence of early complications after stoma formation (within 30 days of surgery) is difficult to determine and has been reported to be in a range of 3%-82%. AIM: The aim of this study was to analyse the onset of stomal, peristomal and skin complications one month (30 days) after ostomy creation. METHOD: This review analysed enteral stoma therapy nurse reports on patients who had an ostomy created between January 2016 and December 2020. FINDINGS: Complications were analysed according to ostomy type: colostomy, ileostomy and urostomy. There were 1292 incidences of complications: skin complications were the most common (26%), and abscess the least common (0%). CONCLUSION: A majority (63%) of patients experienced at least one or more complications within 30 days of surgery. Haemorrhage was reported as a complication (2%) but the authors found no data on its incidence in the literature. In addition to early complications, late complications were detected.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineColostomyIleostomyStoma (medicine)Incidence (geometry)ComplicationSurgeryGeneral surgeryOpticsPhysicsStoma care and complicationsSurgical site infection preventionColorectal Cancer Surgical Treatments
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