Chart — Gastrointestinal
Ostomy Comparison Chart
Side-by-side comparison of colostomy, ileostomy, and urostomy — anatomical source, output characteristics, skin care requirements, diet considerations, and key nursing priorities.
Educational use only. This content is intended for nursing students and exam preparation. Always involve a wound, ostomy, and continence (WOC) nurse for complex ostomy management. This material supports nursing education and exam review. It is not medical advice and is not a substitute for clinical judgment, institutional policy, or medical direction. Always follow facility protocols and current provider orders.
Colostomy
Large intestine (colon)
LLQ • Formed/semi-formed stool
Ileostomy
Small intestine (ileum)
RLQ • Liquid output • Highest skin risk
Urostomy
Urinary diversion (ileal conduit)
RLQ • Urine output (not stool)
| Feature | Colostomy | Ileostomy | Urostomy |
|---|---|---|---|
| Anatomical source | Large intestine (colon) — descending, sigmoid, transverse, or ascending | Small intestine (ileum) — distal ileum | Urinary diversion — ileal conduit diverts ureters to abdominal surface |
| Common indications | Colorectal cancer, diverticulitis with perforation (Hartmann's), volvulus, trauma, bowel obstruction | Ulcerative colitis (total proctocolectomy), Crohn's disease, FAP, loop ileostomy for bowel rest | Bladder cancer (cystectomy), neurogenic bladder, bladder exstrophy, radiation cystitis |
| Typical location | Left lower quadrant (LLQ) — for descending/sigmoid. Right side for transverse/ascending. | Right lower quadrant (RLQ) — standard. Stoma protrudes 2–3 cm (spout). | Right lower quadrant (RLQ) — protrudes 1–2 cm. |
| Output character | Formed to semi-formed stool (descending/sigmoid). Ascending colostomy = liquid/paste. | Liquid to porridge consistency — continuous drainage. High enzyme content. | Clear yellow urine. Mucous threads normal (from ileal segment). Continuous drainage. |
| Output amount | Descending/sigmoid: 1–2 formed stools/day. Ascending/transverse: 400–800 mL/day. | 800–1200 mL/day initial; adapts to 500–800 mL/day. High output if >1000 mL/day. | ~1–2 mL/kg/hr (normal urine output). No voluntary control. |
| Stoma appearance | Red/pink, moist, round, slightly raised — protrudes 1–2 cm | Red/pink, moist, protrudes 2–3 cm (spout prevents skin contact with enzymatic output) | Red/pink, moist, protrudes 1–2 cm. Mucous strands in output are normal. |
| Skin risk level | Moderate — alkaline stool causes breakdown if leakage occurs | HIGH — enzymatic liquid is highly corrosive to peristomal skin. Meticulous skin barrier essential. | Moderate — urine is acidic and irritating. Crystal formation (white deposits) common. |
| Pouch type | Drainable or closed-end pouch (closed-end for formed stool). Change every 3–7 days. | Two-piece or one-piece drainable system. Empty when 1/3–1/2 full. Change every 3–5 days. | Urinary pouch with drainage valve. Empty every 3–4 hours. Night drainage bag recommended. |
| Diet considerations | Generally normal diet. Note gas-producing foods (beans, broccoli, cabbage). Constipation risk. | Avoid high-fiber/blockage-risk foods (corn, nuts, dried fruit, popcorn, skins). Chew food well. High fluid intake. | Cranberry juice helps reduce crystal formation and maintain acid pH. Adequate fluid intake essential. |
| Primary complication | Peristomal hernia, prolapse, retraction, stenosis, parastomal infection | Peristomal skin breakdown from enzymatic output, dehydration/electrolyte imbalance from high output, food blockage | Urinary tract infection, crystal formation on stoma, stomal stenosis, anastomotic leak |
| Irrigation possible? | Yes — sigmoid/descending colostomy can be irrigated to regulate output (every 24–48 hrs). Not for transverse or right-sided. | No — output is liquid and continuous; irrigation is not appropriate | No — urinary diversion; irrigation not used for output management |
| Key NCLEX distinction | Formed stool, LLQ location, lower skin risk. Irrigation possible for sigmoid/descending type. | Liquid output, RLQ location, HIGHEST skin risk, dehydration/electrolyte risk, food blockage risk. | URINE output (not stool). Mucus in output is NORMAL. Crystal formation treated with dilute white vinegar. |
When to Call the Provider — Any Ostomy Type
Source: Wound, Ostomy and Continence Nurses Society (WOCN) Clinical Guidelines; ACG Colorectal Cancer Guidelines
Related Resources
Standards & sources
Fact-checked Jun 21, 2026This page is written to align with WOCN Society Clinical Guidelines; ACG Colorectal Cancer Guidelines. It is an educational summary, not a citation of any single document — always verify specific doses, values, and protocols against current guidelines and your facility policy. How we source content →
