Cureus. 2025 Apr 1;17(4):e81587. doi: 10.7759/cureus.81587. eCollection 2025 Apr.
ABSTRACT
We report a case of multiple liver abscesses after necrotizing enterocolitis (NEC), which were successfully detected by ultrasound screening and treated successfully. This baby was not premature but had truncus arteriosus and was at risk of NEC. NEC developed on day 7, and abdominal drainage, bowel resection, and enterostomy were performed on day 12. The postoperative clinical course and laboratory data were uneventful. However, abdominal ultrasound screening, which was performed to check for any postoperative complications, revealed multiple liver abscesses on postoperative day 14. Contrast-enhanced computed tomography was performed at the same time, but only one of them was detected. Broad-spectrum antibiotics were administrated intravenously for eight weeks in total. Follow-up ultrasounds showed only scars by day 79. The prognosis for neonates with multiple liver abscesses after NEC is poor, but they could be detected by ultrasound and successfully treated while asymptomatic in this case. High spatial resolution for small lesions and noninvasiveness to patients make ultrasound suitable for screening neonatal liver abscesses. Neonatal NEC can cause fatal complications. The development of workup protocols, including ultrasound screening, may contribute to improved prognosis.
PMID:40322439 | PMC:PMC12045754 | DOI:10.7759/cureus.81587