RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 A very persistent chicken bone: two separate perforations from the same foreign object 2 months apart JF BMJ Case Reports JO BMJ Case Reports FD BMJ Publishing Group Ltd SP e228050 DO 10.1136/bcr-2018-228050 VO 12 IS 5 A1 Andrew James Brown A1 Thomas Whitehead-Clarke A1 Vera Tudyka YR 2019 UL http://casereports.bmj.com/content/12/5/e228050.abstract AB A 56-year-old man presented acutely with abdominal pain and raised inflammatory markers. Initial CT images demonstrated acute inflammation in the right upper quadrant surrounding a high-density linear structure. The appearance was of a chicken bone causing a contained small bowel perforation. This was managed conservatively with intravenous antibiotics and the patient was discharged 10 days later. The same patient returned to the hospital 2 months later, once again with an acute abdomen. CT imaging on this occasion showed distal migration of the chicken bone as well as free gas and fluid indicative of a new small bowel perforation. The patient underwent an emergency laparotomy, washout and small bowel resection. No foreign body was found at laparotomy or in the histopathology specimen. The postoperative course was complicated by an anastomotic leak. A further CT on that admission demonstrated that the chicken bone had migrated to the rectum!