Apr 11, 2019

Porta hepatis abscess and portal vein thrombosis following ingestion of a fishbone

BMJ case reports
Brittany Greene, Daniel Jones, Josée Sarrazin, Natalie G Coburn
A man in his late 50s presented to the emergency room with a 1-month history of severe abdominal pain and an endoscopic fishbone retrieval from his rectum. Serial CT scans revealed a fishbone located in the patient's upper abdomen, which had migrated through the stomach wall, into the periportal space, causing a contained gastric perforation, development of a porta hepatis abscess and secondary portal vein thrombosis. Furthermore, the sharp tip of the fishbone lay 5 mm from the patient's hepatic...