Hi Jane,
I understand better now. You have inflammation in the diverted pouch, as well as a bit upstream from the pouch. That changes things in my mind (favorably). Diversion Pouchitis and Diversion Colitis is a fairly common phenomenon, you may be suffering from that. Doctors believe it happens because fatty acids found in our stool are nourishment for the lining of our bowel, and without the stool passing through the tissue, it’s gets inflammation. I have read a lot about diversion Pouchitis because I had it for two months before my takedown. The good news, within 3 weeks my takedown surgery, my diversion Pouchitis was completely gone! The best remedy for diversion Pouchitis is to connect the JPouch from the literature I had read. When I had diversion illness, my doctor would not even put me on Metronidazole or Cipro because he did not think it was a bacterial imbalance, but rather inflammation from the tissue under distress because of the lack of fecal throughput. I did go on Fatty Acid Enemas nightly, which helped. Is your inflammation so bad that the surgeon can’t close the ostomy? Maybe you need a broad spectrum anti inflammatory like prednisone to calm things down? (surgeons avoid this due to weaker post op healing). I would try to go for a reconnection surgery, and don’t worry about pouch failure. I don’t think it makes sense to highly correlate diversion Pouchitis with post closure classic Pouchitis- they are likely to have different mechanisms at play. Many many patients with diversion disease get reconnected and do fine for years. You have three options, 1) Stay diverted for a long time and suffer the challenge of remission, 2) Radically excise the JPouch and go with an End Ileostomy (you can always do that down the road - no need to consider that now), and 3) finally go for a connection. I chose connection. I did indeed get Pouchitis, six months after closure and I am treating it. There are tons of drugs that work for classic Pouchitis, and less so for diversion Pouchitis. You are in a tough spot, but this could all resolve after getting hooked up.
For me, my symptoms are like a 5 out of 10, I can live with them. But is kinda sucks. I am on Stelara for a while and I am unsure if it is helping. I use Rowasa enemas also. They are non steroidal.