AI Article Synopsis

  • * The patient presented with severe abdominal pain, vomiting, fever, and jaundice; initial treatments included antibiotics and abscess drainage, but a follow-up CT scan revealed the fishbone causing ongoing issues.
  • * After surgical intervention to remove the fishbone and appropriate post-operative care, the patient's condition improved significantly, with follow-up imaging showing complete recovery from the liver abscesses.

Article Abstract

Accidental ingestion of a foreign body into the gastrointestinal tract is not uncommon, however the development of hepatic abscesses secondary to digestive perforation by a foreign body is rare. We report the case of pyogenic hepatic abscesses secondary to gastric perforation by a fishbone complicated by acute peritonitis. A 53-year-old patient was admitted to our hospital with the main complaints: diffuse abdominal pain with vomiting in a context of fever and physical asthenia. A painful febrile hepatomegaly with jaundice was objectified, as well as a non-specific biological inflammatory syndrome. An initial abdominopelvic CT scan revealed multifocal liver abscesses. Faced with the initial therapeutic failure associating parenteral antibiotic therapy and abscess drainage, a second abdominal CT scan identified a foreign body straddling the antropyloric wall and segment I of the liver.A xypho-pelvic midline laparotomy was performed with nearly 200 cc of peritoneal fluid coming out. A fishbone approximately 5 cm long was extracted by laparotomy, followed by gastric closure with omentum, peritoneal cleansing and drainage. Symptomatic adjuvant treatment was initiated, including a proton pump inhibitor (Pantoprazole). He also benefited from transfusion support in the face of anemia. Antibiotic therapy was continued for a total of 2 weeks after surgery. The evolution was favorable with follow-up imaging at 3 months, showing complete resorption of the hepatic abscesses.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11151909PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.48327/mtsi.v4i1.2024.390DOI Listing

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