“…Although the incidence is less than 1%, sharp objects such as toothpicks, sewing needles, and fish bones can result in hollow viscous perforation [ 1 ]. An ingested foreign body may migrate to the liver and remain inert, only causing an abscess years later [ 2 ]. The first reported case of hepatic abscess due to gastrointestinal perforation by an ingested foreign body was reported by Lambert and colleagues in 1898, and since then only 59 cases have been reported in the literature [ 3 , 4 ].…”