@Rigel
During a long course of antibiotics, I got a miserable case of C Diff. I was pooing soup about every 15 minutes, day and night, with a lot of cramping and discomfort. For those unfamiliar with this scourge, it happens when antibiotics kill off the good microcritters in one's bowel, allowing their competitors, the bad microcritters, to flourish and you poo and poo and poo.
Luckily, my doctor ordered a bowel catheter, which allowed the liquid poo to flow into a bedside bag and protected my anus and surround. Not fun, VERY embarrassing because you lose all control of pooing, but appreciated.
https://ibb.co/jRV0pL3
The tube goes in your rectum and is retained by the water filled donut balloon. The liquid poo flows tough the tube into the bedside poo bag pretty much continually. Periodically (twice daily) the the patient is given essentially a bag enema via the system, which remains in place for a week or more, to flush things out.
The only cure is to reestablish the bowel microcritters. Luckily for me, a mighty cleansing enema followed by probiotic implants got my microcritters reestablished, although it took about 6 months to really get back to my normal pooing schedule.
I was seriously considering a fecal implant but it was not needed. The concern is, of course, transfer of pathogens present in a potential poo donor