Your small and large intestines, also known as the bowels, are key components of your digestive system. The small intestine contains beneficial bacteria that help break down food, allowing your body to absorb nutrients and fluids.
Partially digested food then moves into the large intestine or colon, where bacteria further break it down, potentially producing gas. The large intestine also absorbs water from food and drinks, converting liquid waste into solid waste or stool. To protect themselves from irritants like undigested food particles, your intestines produce mucus.
A mucous fistula connects a detached section of your intestine to a small, surgically created opening in the skin on your abdomen (stoma). This allows individuals with certain bowel diseases to expel mucus (intestinal secretions) through the stoma rather than the anus.
Mucous fistulas may be involved in surgeries like bowel resection, including colectomy, ileostomy, or colostomy. These procedures are often necessary for individuals with IBD, colon cancer, or other digestive disorders.
Individuals with Inflammatory Bowel Diseases (IBDs) such as Crohn’s disease and ulcerative colitis are the most likely to need a mucous fistula. This procedure typically takes place during surgeries aimed at treating an IBD.
Those with a mucous fistula will also have an ileostomy or colostomy, with digested food exiting through a separate stoma. Surgeons create a mucous fistula to prevent internal leakage, or “blowing out,” inside the abdomen. For ulcerative colitis or Crohn’s disease, an ileostomy and mucous fistula are most common. For diverticulitis or sigmoid colon cancer, a colostomy and mucous fistula are more typical.
Other conditions that may necessitate a mucous fistula include:
A mucous fistula in infants and kids may be necessary to treat:
One of these procedures may be combined with a mucous fistula procedure:
With either an end ileostomy or end colostomy, you may have two stomas: a larger stoma for solid waste and a smaller opening for mucus, known as a mucous fistula. The disconnected stoma is referred to as the distal mucous fistula. You might require an ostomy appliance (bag) pouch on the mucous fistula stoma at first if you have a lot of mucus. In comparison to an ileostomy or colostomy appliance, this one is often smaller. Mucus production diminishes with time. In the end, you might just wrap a piece of gauze over the mucous fistula stoma. Several people receive stoma caps.
The following side effects are possible following a mucous fistula procedure:
What you should and shouldn’t do before to a mucous fistula procedure will be discussed with you by your surgeon. As a rule, you might have to:
Hospitals perform procedures on the digestive tract. To put you to sleep during the process, general anesthesia is administered. Costomy or ileostomy procedures are performed concurrently with a mucous fistula operation.
Your surgeon perform the following:
In healthy individuals, a mucous fistula along with the associated end ileostomy or colostomy is typically not a permanent solution. Your healthcare provider might suggest this temporary procedure to allow your inflamed bowels to rest and heal. It could take several weeks, months, or even years to heal. Your surgeon can reconnect your intestine when you’re ready, enabling you to poop through your anus once more.
You may spend up to a week in the hospital, where a care team will teach you how to manage the stomas and mucous fistula. Expect some bruising and light bleeding. Initially, the stomas may appear large, moist, and dark but will become smaller and flatter over time.
You might also expel a significant amount of mucus through the mucous fistula. These issues typically improve as you recover. Follow your doctor’s recovery recommendations, which may include avoiding heavy lifting until you are fully healed. In some cases, anti-inflammatory suppositories can help reduce blood and mucus discharge from the mucous fistula.