Why I Don’t Use Moldable Rings — And What Works Better
Posted: 2025-08-13 17:33:02
Why I Don’t Use Moldable Rings — And What Works Better
1. Rings Reduce Adhesion Before They Even Touch the Skin
Rings require molding with your fingers to fit your stoma shape.
The moment you touch them, skin oils and moisture get onto the adhesive surface, reducing stickiness.
In contrast, no-sting paste goes straight from the tube to the wafer/skin without being touched — 100% of its adhesive power is preserved.
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2. Shorter Wear Time Under High-Output Conditions
Rings absorb liquid and swell, which breaks their shape faster in watery output (like ileostomies).
Paste maintains its form longer in liquid-heavy environments, especially if applied in bead patterns that allow controlled spreading and sealing.
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3. Belly Fold + Ring = Moisture Trap
In skin folds, rings can trap moisture and digestive enzymes underneath.
This speeds up skin breakdown and creates perfect conditions for leak burns.
Paste, when applied directly, forms a smooth barrier that flexes with your body and doesn’t hold liquid underneath.
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4. Poor Contouring for Irregular Stomas
Oval, irregular, or angled stomas often require precise shaping right at the edge.
Rings are bulkier and harder to contour tightly without gaps — especially if you’re working around granulomas or scar tissue.
Paste can be applied exactly where needed and adjusted on the spot without lifting the whole seal.
---
5. More Waste, More Cost
Rings often need trimming, stretching, or doubling up to work, which wastes material.
Wear time is typically shorter with rings in high-output situations, meaning more frequent changes and higher monthly costs.
Paste tubes last longer and allow you to use exactly the amount you need.
---
6. Loss of Flexibility During Movement
Rings are semi-rigid when dry, then soften unevenly as they absorb moisture.
This uneven softening can cause lifting at the wafer edge, especially near the bottom in high-output stomas.
Paste starts flexible and stays flexible, moving naturally with your abdomen and fold.
---
Bottom Line
Rings are often marketed as the “easy” solution, but for many real-world ostomates — especially with:
High-output stomas
Belly folds or uneven skin contours
Oval/irregular stomas
History of leak burns
…paste is the more precise, longer-lasting, and skin-friendlier choice.
Been working all day with ChatGPT on this, trying to see if I could improve on my current illeostomy application process and it even tried to get me to use a ring, even partially until I stated the obvious with it losing adhesion when handled. Then it admitted it traps moisture (like output) against the skin which we don't want that at all. So finally it gave up and offered me a solution outlining why paste is superior to rings especially with my angled, low profile oval stoma in a belly fold. Which has gotten a little better now that I lost some weight the stoma sticks out a normal 3/4 inch now. Plus I was irritating the stoma when rinsing with other than just plain water and it was retracting which pops the seal. But everything changed for the better when I started using oil free eye makeup remover as a adhesive remover and skin cleanser prep and then followed up with just plain soap and water to wash it off for squeaky clean skin results. Warming the skin with the blow dryer also. Absolutely fantastic barrier and wafer adhesion now. I may get a tiny little leak burn every once in awhile but it doesn't even hurt.
Jesus I should write a book.
1. Rings Reduce Adhesion Before They Even Touch the Skin
Rings require molding with your fingers to fit your stoma shape.
The moment you touch them, skin oils and moisture get onto the adhesive surface, reducing stickiness.
In contrast, no-sting paste goes straight from the tube to the wafer/skin without being touched — 100% of its adhesive power is preserved.
---
2. Shorter Wear Time Under High-Output Conditions
Rings absorb liquid and swell, which breaks their shape faster in watery output (like ileostomies).
Paste maintains its form longer in liquid-heavy environments, especially if applied in bead patterns that allow controlled spreading and sealing.
---
3. Belly Fold + Ring = Moisture Trap
In skin folds, rings can trap moisture and digestive enzymes underneath.
This speeds up skin breakdown and creates perfect conditions for leak burns.
Paste, when applied directly, forms a smooth barrier that flexes with your body and doesn’t hold liquid underneath.
---
4. Poor Contouring for Irregular Stomas
Oval, irregular, or angled stomas often require precise shaping right at the edge.
Rings are bulkier and harder to contour tightly without gaps — especially if you’re working around granulomas or scar tissue.
Paste can be applied exactly where needed and adjusted on the spot without lifting the whole seal.
---
5. More Waste, More Cost
Rings often need trimming, stretching, or doubling up to work, which wastes material.
Wear time is typically shorter with rings in high-output situations, meaning more frequent changes and higher monthly costs.
Paste tubes last longer and allow you to use exactly the amount you need.
---
6. Loss of Flexibility During Movement
Rings are semi-rigid when dry, then soften unevenly as they absorb moisture.
This uneven softening can cause lifting at the wafer edge, especially near the bottom in high-output stomas.
Paste starts flexible and stays flexible, moving naturally with your abdomen and fold.
---
Bottom Line
Rings are often marketed as the “easy” solution, but for many real-world ostomates — especially with:
High-output stomas
Belly folds or uneven skin contours
Oval/irregular stomas
History of leak burns
…paste is the more precise, longer-lasting, and skin-friendlier choice.
Been working all day with ChatGPT on this, trying to see if I could improve on my current illeostomy application process and it even tried to get me to use a ring, even partially until I stated the obvious with it losing adhesion when handled. Then it admitted it traps moisture (like output) against the skin which we don't want that at all. So finally it gave up and offered me a solution outlining why paste is superior to rings especially with my angled, low profile oval stoma in a belly fold. Which has gotten a little better now that I lost some weight the stoma sticks out a normal 3/4 inch now. Plus I was irritating the stoma when rinsing with other than just plain water and it was retracting which pops the seal. But everything changed for the better when I started using oil free eye makeup remover as a adhesive remover and skin cleanser prep and then followed up with just plain soap and water to wash it off for squeaky clean skin results. Warming the skin with the blow dryer also. Absolutely fantastic barrier and wafer adhesion now. I may get a tiny little leak burn every once in awhile but it doesn't even hurt.
Jesus I should write a book.