ICD variantAmebic liver abscess is a specific ICD-10 coded subtype of Amebiasis. The clinical content below covers Amebiasis in general.
Infectious DiseasesevereICD-10 · A06.4
Amebic liver abscess.Care & specialists in Argentina
In Argentina, amebic liver abscess is managed by infectious diseases. Amebiasis is intestinal and extraintestinal disease caused by the protozoan parasite Entamoeba histolytica, transmitted by ingestion of cysts from fecally contaminated food, water, or hands. WHO estimates 35-50 million symptomatic cases globally each year and 40,000-100,000 deaths, making it the second deadliest parasitic infection worldwide after malaria.
Amebiasis (ICD-10: A06) is infection of the colon and occasionally other organs by Entamoeba histolytica, a pseudopod-forming protozoan parasite. The lifecycle has two forms. Cysts — the infective, environmentally hardy quadrinucleate stage — are shed in feces and ingested by the next host. Once inside the small intestine, cysts excyst into trophozoites that colonize the colon.
key facts
Prevalence
Approximately 50 million symptomatic infections worldwide per year; 480 million carry Entamoeba species, though only ~10% are true E. histolytica (WHO)
Demographics
Highest burden in tropical regions with poor sanitation — South Asia, sub-Saharan Africa, Central and South America, Mexico
Avg. age
All ages affected; severe disease (dysentery, abscess) skews to adults aged 20-50, especially men for hepatic abscess (M:F 7-10:1)
Global cases
40,000-100,000 deaths annually; second deadliest parasitic disease after malaria
Specialist
Infectious Disease
ICD-10
A06.4
§ 02
How you might notice it
The key symptoms of Amebic liver abscess are: Gradual onset over 1-4 weeks of crampy abdominal pain and loose stools — slower than the abrupt presentation of bacterial dysentery, helping distinguish amebic from shigella or salmonella colitis., Bloody mucoid diarrhea with small-volume stools and tenesmus — the classic amebic dysentery picture, often 6-10 stools per day with visible blood and mucus., Lower abdominal pain and cramping that worsens with defecation, sometimes localized to the right lower quadrant if cecal involvement predominates., Variable or absent fever — many patients with amebic colitis are afebrile, in contrast to the high fevers typical of shigellosis or bacterial enterocolitis., Weight loss and fatigue over weeks of untreated invasive disease, sometimes the dominant symptom in chronic amebic colitis., Right upper quadrant pain, fever, and hepatomegaly in amebic liver abscess — pain is dull, constant, and may radiate to the right shoulder., Cough, pleuritic chest pain, and 'anchovy paste' brown sputum in pleuropulmonary amebiasis from rupture of liver abscess through the diaphragm..
01Gradual onset over 1-4 weeks of crampy abdominal pain and loose stools — slower than the abrupt presentation of bacterial dysentery, helping distinguish amebic from shigella or salmonella colitis.
02Bloody mucoid diarrhea with small-volume stools and tenesmus — the classic amebic dysentery picture, often 6-10 stools per day with visible blood and mucus.
03Lower abdominal pain and cramping that worsens with defecation, sometimes localized to the right lower quadrant if cecal involvement predominates.
04
§ 03
How it’s diagnosed
diagnosis
Diagnosing amebiasis requires distinguishing E. histolytica from morphologically identical non-pathogenic Entamoeba species — a task that traditional stool microscopy cannot do reliably. Microscopy that identifies 'Entamoeba histolytica/dispar/moshkovskii' on the basis of cyst morphology is reported in many laboratories worldwide and overestimates true infection rates roughly 10-fold. The 2015 WHO position and the CDC current recommendation is to use either a stool antigen test specific for the E. histolytica galactose/N-acetylgalactosamine lectin or stool PCR to confirm the pathogen. Antigen tests have sensitivity 80-95% and specificity over 90% on fresh unpreserved stool; PCR exceeds 90% sensitivity and remains positive on preserved or refrigerated specimens. For amebic colitis, colonoscopy can reveal flask-shaped ulcers with relatively normal intervening mucosa; biopsy edges show trophozoites with ingested erythrocytes — pathognomonic when seen. For amebic liver abscess, ultrasound is the first-line imaging modality, showing a round or oval hypoechoic lesion typically in the right lobe; CT and MRI further characterize the lesion and exclude pyogenic abscess. Serology (indirect hemagglutination assay or ELISA) is highly sensitive (over 90%) in invasive disease, especially liver abscess, but does not distinguish past from current infection in endemic populations. The combination of compatible imaging plus positive serology plus exclusion of pyogenic abscess by clinical context is usually diagnostic. Differential diagnoses include shigellosis, salmonellosis, campylobacter, inflammatory bowel disease, ischemic colitis, and pseudomembranous colitis for intestinal disease, and pyogenic liver abscess, hydatid cyst, and hepatocellular carcinoma with central necrosis for liver disease.
Key tests
01
Stool E. histolytica-specific antigen ELISADetects the Gal/GalNAc lectin antigen specific to E. histolytica, distinguishing it from non-pathogenic E. dispar and E. moshkovskii. First-line test where available — sensitivity 80-95% on fresh stool.
02
§ 04
Treatment & cost
medical treatments
✓Metronidazole (750 mg three times daily for 7-10 days for invasive disease; 500-750 mg three times daily for 5-7 days for liver abscess)
✓Tinidazole (2 g once daily for 3 days for colitis; 2 g daily for 3-5 days for liver abscess)
✓Paromomycin (25-35 mg/kg/day in three divided doses for 7 days)
✓Diloxanide furoate (500 mg three times daily for 10 days)
surgical options
Emergency laparotomy for fulminant amebic colitis with perforationDespite surgery, mortality from fulminant amebic colitis with perforation exceeds 50%.
Surgical drainage of liver abscess (rare)When indicated, mortality remains 10-15% in the rupture setting; uncomplicated medically-managed abscess has under 1% mortality.
§ 05
Causes & risk factors
known causes
Ingestion of Entamoeba histolytica cysts in contaminated food or water
The exclusive route of acquisition. Cysts survive in moist environments for weeks and resist chlorination at standard drinking-water doses. Fecally contaminated water, raw vegetables washed with contaminated water, and food handled by unwashed hands deliver the parasite to a new host.
Person-to-person transmission via the fecal-oral route
Cyst passers — including asymptomatic carriers and food handlers — can transmit the parasite directly. Outbreaks have been documented in institutions, families, and among men who have sex with men through oral-anal contact.
Travel to or residence in endemic regions
Most cases in high-income countries occur in returned travelers from South Asia, sub-Saharan Africa, Mexico, and Central or South America, or in migrants from these regions. Itinerary, duration, and food/water choices during travel define exposure risk.
Poor sanitation and inadequate sewage treatment
Endemic transmission requires fecal contamination of water and food supplies. Communities without piped water, sealed sewage, or hygienic toilet facilities sustain high rates of cyst circulation. Improving sanitation infrastructure is the most effective population-level prevention.
Immunosuppression and corticosteroid use
Corticosteroids and immunosuppressive therapy increase the risk of fulminant amebic colitis many-fold. This is why distinguishing inflammatory bowel disease from amebic colitis is critical before initiating empirical steroids in returned travelers.
risk factors
Residence in or travel to endemic regions (South Asia, sub-Saharan Africa, Latin America)environmental
§ 06
Living with it
01Drink only boiled, bottled, or filtered (≤1 micron) water when traveling in endemic regions — chlorination at standard doses does not reliably kill amebic cysts
02Eat only thoroughly cooked food served hot; avoid raw vegetables and salads washed with local water
03Peel fruits yourself; avoid pre-cut or vendor-prepared fruits
04Wash hands with soap and water after using the toilet and before preparing or eating food
05Test and treat asymptomatic household contacts of confirmed cases — cyst passers sustain transmission within families
06Improve community sanitation through sealed sewage, piped water, and education on hand hygiene — population-level interventions reduce endemic incidence substantially
recommended foods
•Oral rehydration solution during diarrheal illness — restores fluid, sodium, and glucose-coupled absorption
Infectious disease or tropical medicine specialist input is recommended for any imaging-confirmed amebic liver abscess, any suspected amebic colitis requiring distinction from inflammatory bowel disease before starting steroids, any failure of first-line therapy, any case in pregnancy or immunosuppression, and any institutional outbreak. Primary care manages straightforward asymptomatic cyst passage well using standard luminal regimens.
Asymptomatic intestinal infection (cyst passers)Approximately 90% of E. histolytica infections. Carriers shed cysts but have no symptoms; nevertheless they require treatment with a luminal agent to prevent later invasive disease and onward transmission.
Amebic colitis (non-dysenteric)Gradual onset over 1-3 weeks of crampy abdominal pain and loose stools, sometimes with mucus. Patients are systemically well. Mimics inflammatory bowel disease — empirical steroids can be catastrophic.
Amebic dysenteryFrequent small-volume bloody stools with mucus, severe lower abdominal cramping, tenesmus, and sometimes fever. Fulminant necrotizing colitis is a rare but lethal complication with mortality over 50%.
AmebomaLocalized amebic granulomatous mass in the colon, most often cecum, that mimics carcinoma on imaging and endoscopy. Resolves with anti-amebic therapy alone — surgery is rarely required.
Amebic liver abscessThe most common extraintestinal manifestation, occurring in 1-10% of invasive infections. Single right-lobe abscess in 80%. Presents with right upper quadrant pain, fever, hepatomegaly, and elevated alkaline phosphatase. Mortality under 1% with prompt treatment, but rises if abscess ruptures into pleura, pericardium, or peritoneum.
Pleuropulmonary amebiasisDirect extension of liver abscess through the diaphragm into pleura or lung, producing empyema or hepatobronchial fistula with characteristic 'anchovy paste' sputum.
Living with Amebic liver abscess
Timeline
Clinical improvement in amebic colitis begins within 24-48 hours of starting nitroimidazole therapy; full symptom resolution within 7-10 days. Amebic liver abscess pain and fever resolve within 3-7 days; radiographic cavity persists for 3-9 months, with progressive shrinkage on serial ultrasound. The luminal-agent course adds 7-10 days. Confirmatory stool testing is recommended 4-6 weeks after treatment completion. Return to normal activities is generally possible within 2 weeks of starting therapy for uncomplicated colitis; 4-6 weeks for liver abscess.
Lifestyle
01Hydrate aggressively during diarrheal illness with oral rehydration solution; severe dehydration warrants medical assessment
02Avoid antimotility drugs (loperamide, diphenoxylate) in amebic dysentery — they prolong toxin contact with mucosa and can worsen disease
03Avoid alcohol during nitroimidazole treatment and for 48 hours after; disulfiram-like reactions occur with metronidazole
04Complete the full course of both tissue and luminal agents — short courses leave cysts behind and lead to relapse
05Maintain household hygiene during convalescence — patients can shed cysts for weeks after symptom resolution
06Return for follow-up stool antigen test at 4-6 weeks post-treatment to confirm parasitological cure
Daily management
01
Complementary approaches
Adequate oral or IV rehydration with electrolyte replacementEssential supportive measure in amebic dysentery — diarrheal fluid loss can be substantial. WHO oral rehydration solution corrects mild-to-moderate dehydration; severe cases require IV fluids until volume status normalizes.
Choosing a doctor
Look for a clinician with access to E. histolytica-specific antigen testing or PCR — many regions still rely on microscopy that overdiagnoses non-pathogenic Entamoeba. For suspected liver abscess, interventional radiology backup is essential. In endemic countries, public hospitals and government infectious disease departments routinely handle large case volumes and tend to have established protocols.
Patient support resources
CDC — Amebiasis (Parasites) →Authoritative US patient and clinician guidance on diagnosis, treatment, and prevention.
Amebiasis is intestinal infection caused by the protozoan parasite Entamoeba histolytica, acquired by swallowing cysts in contaminated food or water. Most carriers stay asymptomatic; about 10% develop colitis and 1-10% develop liver abscess. WHO estimates 35-50 million cases yearly.
How is amebiasis transmitted?▾▴
Transmission is fecal-oral — swallowing E. histolytica cysts shed in stool. Most cases come from contaminated drinking water, raw vegetables washed with contaminated water, or food handled by infected hands. Oral-anal contact and household carrier spread also occur.
What are the symptoms of amebiasis?▾▴
Most carriers have no symptoms. Amebic colitis develops gradually over 1-4 weeks with crampy abdominal pain and loose stools. Amebic dysentery causes bloody mucoid diarrhea and tenesmus. Liver abscess presents with right upper quadrant pain, fever, and tender hepatomegaly.
How long does it take for symptoms to appear?▾▴
The incubation period typically ranges from 1 to 4 weeks after swallowing cysts, but can be longer. Some carriers remain asymptomatic for months or years before invasive disease develops, and a fraction never develop symptoms at all.
How is amebiasis diagnosed?▾▴
Diagnosis requires distinguishing E. histolytica from non-pathogenic look-alike species, which stool microscopy alone cannot do. Stool antigen testing or PCR identifies true E. histolytica accurately. Liver abscess is confirmed by ultrasound plus positive amebic serology.
Is amebiasis curable?▾▴
Yes. With appropriate antiparasitic therapy — typically metronidazole or tinidazole followed by paromomycin or diloxanide furoate — cure exceeds 90%. Asymptomatic cyst passers also need treatment with a luminal agent to prevent later invasive disease and onward transmission.
What is the best treatment for amebiasis?▾▴
First-line treatment uses tinidazole 2 g daily for 3 days or metronidazole 750 mg three times daily for 7-10 days to clear invasive trophozoites, followed by paromomycin 25-35 mg/kg/day in three divided doses for 7 days to clear residual cysts. Skipping the luminal phase leads to relapse.
Can I drink alcohol while taking metronidazole for amebiasis?▾▴
No. Metronidazole and tinidazole can cause a severe disulfiram-like reaction with alcohol — flushing, vomiting, tachycardia, and hypotension. Avoid all alcohol during treatment and for at least 48 hours after the last dose.
How do I prevent amebiasis when traveling?▾▴
Drink only boiled, bottled, or properly filtered water; avoid ice from unknown sources; eat only food served hot; avoid raw vegetables and salads; peel fruits yourself; wash hands frequently. Standard chlorination does not reliably kill amebic cysts.
Why is amebic liver abscess more common in men?▾▴
Amebic liver abscess shows a 7-10:1 male-to-female ratio despite roughly equal intestinal infection rates. The cause is not fully understood but likely involves hormonal effects on hepatic susceptibility and possibly alcohol-related liver factors.
Do I need a colonoscopy for amebiasis?▾▴
Most patients do not. Stool antigen or PCR testing plus typical symptoms is sufficient for diagnosis. Colonoscopy is reserved for cases where the differential includes inflammatory bowel disease before starting steroids, when stool testing is unrevealing, or when symptoms persist despite treatment.
Should asymptomatic carriers be treated?▾▴
Yes. Asymptomatic E. histolytica carriers should receive a luminal agent (paromomycin 25-35 mg/kg/day for 7 days, or diloxanide furoate 500 mg three times daily for 10 days) to eradicate cysts, prevent later invasive disease, and stop onward transmission to household members.
Can amebiasis cause a liver problem?▾▴
Yes. Amebic liver abscess develops in 1-10% of invasive infections, when trophozoites enter the portal blood and reach the liver. It presents with right upper quadrant pain, fever, and elevated alkaline phosphatase. Ultrasound shows a typical right-lobe hypoechoic lesion. Most respond to oral antibiotics without drainage.
How long does treatment last?▾▴
Tinidazole regimens last 3-5 days; metronidazole regimens 7-10 days. The luminal-agent phase (paromomycin or diloxanide furoate) adds 7-10 more days. Total treatment is typically 10-20 days. Liver abscess imaging takes much longer to resolve — months — even after clinical cure.
Can amebiasis come back after treatment?▾▴
Recurrence after adequate combined tissue and luminal therapy is uncommon. Apparent recurrence usually represents new infection from ongoing environmental exposure, especially for residents and frequent travelers to endemic regions. Confirmatory stool testing 4-6 weeks after treatment helps distinguish relapse from re-infection.
Is amebiasis dangerous?▾▴
Uncomplicated amebic colitis and liver abscess have mortality under 1% with treatment. Complications are far worse — fulminant colitis with perforation exceeds 50% mortality, pleuropulmonary rupture 15-30%, pericardial rupture over 70%.
Can children get amebiasis?▾▴
Yes, and severe disease in children in highly endemic areas is a recognized cause of childhood mortality and growth impairment. Bangladesh cohort data show 4-10% cumulative incidence of E. histolytica diarrhea per year in preschoolers. Diagnosis and treatment principles are the same as in adults, with weight-based dosing.
What is the difference between amebiasis and giardiasis?▾▴
Both are protozoan parasitic infections transmitted by fecal-oral route. Giardiasis causes greasy non-bloody diarrhea, bloating, and weight loss — it does not invade tissue. Amebiasis can cause invasive colitis with bloody dysentery and liver abscesses. Different stool tests are required to identify each parasite.
How much does amebiasis treatment cost?▾▴
Generic metronidazole, tinidazole, and paromomycin are inexpensive worldwide — typically under USD 10-20 for a complete course in most countries, often much less in India and other generic-supply markets. Hospital admission for severe disease and imaging adds to cost; uncomplicated outpatient treatment is highly affordable.
Is amebiasis sexually transmitted?▾▴
Amebiasis can spread through oral-anal sexual contact, and outbreaks have been documented in men who have sex with men. Transmission is fecal-oral rather than truly sexual, but practical counseling overlaps with other gastrointestinal STIs.
Variable or absent fever — many patients with amebic colitis are afebrile, in contrast to the high fevers typical of shigellosis or bacterial enterocolitis.
05Weight loss and fatigue over weeks of untreated invasive disease, sometimes the dominant symptom in chronic amebic colitis.
06Right upper quadrant pain, fever, and hepatomegaly in amebic liver abscess — pain is dull, constant, and may radiate to the right shoulder.
07Cough, pleuritic chest pain, and 'anchovy paste' brown sputum in pleuropulmonary amebiasis from rupture of liver abscess through the diaphragm.
08Tenderness over the lower right ribs when the examiner percusses the right hepatic margin — a useful bedside sign of right-lobe liver abscess.
09Severe abdominal distension, peritoneal signs, and shock in fulminant amebic colitis with bowel perforation — mortality exceeds 50% even with surgery.
10Painful perianal or genital ulcers in cutaneous amebiasis — rare, usually from contiguous spread or autoinoculation in untreated invasive disease.
early warning signs
•Persistent diarrhea lasting more than 7 days after travel to a region with poor sanitation
•Bloody mucus in stool with crampy lower abdominal pain, particularly in returned travelers or recent migrants
•Right upper quadrant pain and fever in any patient with prior exposure to endemic regions — consider amebic liver abscess
•Asymptomatic stool finding of Entamoeba cysts on routine ova-and-parasite examination — speciation testing is needed before treatment decisions
•Diarrheal symptoms that fail to respond to empirical antibiotics targeting bacterial dysentery
● emergency signs
•Severe abdominal pain, rigid abdomen, fever, and shock — possible amebic colonic perforation or peritonitis requiring emergency laparotomy
•Sudden right upper quadrant pain with breathlessness or shock — rupture of amebic liver abscess into pleura, pericardium, or peritoneum
•High fever, rigors, and hypotension in a known liver abscess — bacterial superinfection or imminent rupture
•Profuse bloody diarrhea with signs of hypovolemic shock — fulminant amebic dysentery requires hospital admission and IV resuscitation
•New focal neurological signs in a patient with amebic disease — rare brain abscess requires urgent imaging and neurosurgical input
Stool PCR for Entamoeba species
Highly sensitive and specific molecular test that identifies E. histolytica and differentiates from E. dispar/moshkovskii. Useful on stored, refrigerated, or preserved samples. Becoming the gold standard in reference labs.
03
Stool microscopy for ova and parasites (3 samples on different days)Identifies Entamoeba cysts and trophozoites but cannot distinguish E. histolytica from non-pathogenic species. Useful as a screening tool; positive findings require confirmatory antigen or PCR testing.
04
Amebic serology (indirect hemagglutination or ELISA IgG)High sensitivity (>90%) in invasive disease, particularly amebic liver abscess. Distinguishes invasive amebiasis from luminal colonization. Limited in endemic regions where many people are seropositive from past infection.
05
Abdominal ultrasound or contrast-enhanced CTFirst-line imaging for suspected amebic liver abscess. Shows a single, round, hypoechoic right-lobe lesion in about 80% of cases. Distinguishes from pyogenic abscess by clinical context and serology.
06
Colonoscopy with biopsy of ulcer edgesIdentifies flask-shaped colonic ulcers in amebic colitis; biopsy of ulcer edges reveals trophozoites with phagocytosed erythrocytes — pathognomonic when seen. Particularly useful when distinguishing amebic colitis from inflammatory bowel disease.
07
Therapeutic-diagnostic aspiration of liver abscessUsed selectively when abscess is large, fails to respond to medical therapy, is at risk of rupture, or pyogenic etiology cannot be excluded clinically. The aspirate appears as 'anchovy paste' brown sterile fluid in amebic abscess.
Outlook
With timely diagnosis and adequate combined tissue-plus-luminal therapy, the prognosis for amebiasis is excellent. Amebic colitis resolves clinically within 3-7 days of starting metronidazole or tinidazole, with parasitological cure exceeding 90% when paired with a luminal agent. Uncomplicated amebic liver abscess has mortality under 1% with prompt medical treatment; radiographic cavity resolution lags clinical recovery by months but typically completes by 9 months. Mortality rises sharply with complications: fulminant colitis with perforation exceeds 50%, rupture of liver abscess into pericardium can exceed 70%, and pleuropulmonary disease carries 15-30% mortality even with treatment. Risk factors for poor outcome include delayed diagnosis (especially when steroids were given for misdiagnosed IBD), pregnancy, malnutrition, age extremes, large or multiple abscesses, and immunosuppression. Recurrence is uncommon after adequate treatment but reflects ongoing exposure in endemic regions — prevention focuses on water and food safety rather than long-term prophylaxis. Children in highly endemic communities can have repeated infections; cumulative growth and cognitive impacts of recurrent diarrheal disease are well-documented.
Prevalence of E. histolytica seropositivity in highly endemic areas exceeds 25% in some communities. Duration of stay and food-water hygiene during travel modify risk.
Poor sanitation and lack of access to safe drinking waterenvironmental
Communities relying on surface water, untreated wells, or open defecation have substantially higher transmission. UN data tie cyst burden to sanitation infrastructure metrics.
Living in or working in institutional settingsenvironmental
Day-care centers, mental health institutions, and refugee camps have documented outbreaks where shared bathrooms and reduced hand-hygiene compliance enable transmission.
Men who have sex with men (oral-anal contact)modifiable
Documented increased seroprevalence and outbreak clusters; CDC includes amebiasis in differentials for proctocolitis in this population.
Steroids increase fulminant colitis risk dramatically; HIV does not increase acquisition but worsens severity. Malnourished children have higher mortality from invasive disease.
Male sex (for liver abscess)non-modifiable
Amebic liver abscess shows a striking 7-10:1 male-to-female ratio, attributed to hormonal effects on hepatocyte susceptibility and possibly alcohol intake. Intestinal amebiasis has roughly equal sex distribution.
Alcohol use disordermodifiable
Alcohol-induced hepatocyte damage may facilitate hepatic seeding by trophozoites; observational data show higher abscess rates in heavy drinkers.
Pregnancynon-modifiable
Pregnancy is associated with more severe invasive amebiasis, possibly due to cell-mediated immune modulation. Maternal mortality from amebic colitis in pregnancy is reported at 15-25%.
•Probiotic-containing foods (yogurt with live cultures) — limited evidence for shortening diarrhea duration but generally safe
•Adequate caloric intake — invasive amebiasis is catabolic and weight loss is common
foods to avoid
•Raw vegetables, unpeeled fruits, salads, and street food in endemic regions or during recovery
•Untreated tap water, ice cubes, and unbottled drinks when traveling endemically
•Alcohol during and for 48 hours after metronidazole or tinidazole
•Antimotility drugs (loperamide, atropine-diphenoxylate) until invasive disease is excluded
•High-fiber and high-fat foods during acute diarrheal phase — delays gut recovery
07Post-amebic colitis — persistent symptoms after cure, possibly from residual mucosal injury, mimicking irritable bowel syndrome
08Growth and cognitive impairment in children with repeated infections in endemic communities
Take metronidazole or tinidazole with food to reduce nausea; avoid alcohol throughout treatment
02Complete the full luminal-agent course even when symptoms have resolved — cysts persist after invasion clears
03Maintain hand hygiene to prevent household transmission during shedding
04Track stool frequency, blood, and any new fever; report worsening symptoms promptly
05Schedule follow-up imaging for liver abscess at 4-12 weeks and a confirmatory stool test at 4-6 weeks
Exercise
Rest during acute disease and abscess resolution. Light activity may resume once fever and diarrhea have settled, typically within 1-2 weeks. After amebic liver abscess, avoid heavy lifting and contact sport for 4-6 weeks to reduce risk of bleeding into a partially-resolved cavity.