1. Laparoscopy treatment of liver abscess secondary to an unusual foreign body (rosemary twig)
- Author
-
Lucas Thá Nassif, Tulio Rucinski, Alesandra Bassani, Victor Hugo Granella, Bruno Landal Cavassin, and André Thá Nassif
- Subjects
Abdominal pain ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Intermittent fever ,Liver Abscess ,Pathology and Forensic Medicine ,Twig ,Foreign-Body Migration ,Internal Medicine ,medicine ,Clinical Case Report ,Laparoscopy ,Abscess ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Hepatic abscess ,medicine.disease ,RC31-1245 ,Surgery ,General Surgery ,Medicine ,Foreign body ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Liver abscess - Abstract
A hepatic abscess caused by a swallowed foreign body is a rare and challenging diagnosis. Most patients have nonspecific symptoms, and more than 90% of patients do not remember having swallowed it, which occurred accidentally. In this setting, fish bones, chicken bones, and toothpicks are the most found foreign bodies. We reported the case of a 54-year-old male patient admitted with abdominal pain and intermittent fever. He was diagnosed with liver abscess and treated successfully with antibiotics and a laparoscopic procedure; a rosemary twig was found during the abscess drainage procedure. Furthermore, a literature review of 22 cases of laparoscopic treated liver abscesses associated with a foreign body was made.
- Published
- 2021