Abstract

BackgroundA small percentage of patients with foreign body ingestion develop complications, which have a variety of clinical presentations. Less than 1% of cases require surgical intervention. We present a patient with an abdominal wall abscess resulting from a fish bone that pierced the cecum. The patient was treated laparoscopically.Case presentationA 55-year-old Japanese man presented to our hospital with a complaint of right lower abdominal pain. A physical examination revealed tenderness, swelling, and redness at the right iliac fossa. Computed tomography showed a low-density area with rim enhancement in his right internal oblique muscle and a hyperdense 20 mm-long pointed object in the wall of the adjacent cecum. Based on the findings we suspected an abdominal wall abscess resulting from a migrating ingested fish bone. He was administered antibiotics as conservative treatment, and the abscess was not seen on subsequent computed tomography.Two months after the initial treatment, he presented with the same symptoms, and a computed tomography scan showed the foreign body in the same location as before with the same low-density area. We diagnosed the low-density area as recurrence of the abdominal wall abscess. He underwent laparoscopic surgery to remove the foreign body. His appendix, and part of his cecum and the parietal peritoneum that included the foreign body, were resected. He had an uneventful postoperative course, and at 1 year after the surgery, the abdominal wall abscess had not recurred.ConclusionsAn abdominal wall abscess developed in association with the migration of an ingested fish bone. We suggest that a laparoscopic surgical resection of the portion of the bowel that includes the foreign body is a useful option for selected cases.

Highlights

  • A small percentage of patients with foreign body ingestion develop complications, which have a variety of clinical presentations

  • We report the case of a patient who was treated laparoscopically for a pyogenic abdominal wall abscess that resulted from migration of an ingested fish bone into the wall of the cecum

  • We should be aware that an abdominal wall abscess can develop in association with an ingested foreign body, such as a fish bone

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Summary

Conclusions

We describe the first laparoscopically treated case of a pyogenic abdominal wall abscess resulting from a fish bone migrating into the wall of the cecum. Our case suggests that our laparoscopic approach for performing a resection of the portion of the bowel containing a foreign body, which was planned based on the results of diagnostic imaging, is a useful option for selected cases. Such cases include those such as ours, with a foreign body that can be identified by CT

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