A 6-year-old male who lived with a mother in a single-parent family was referred to the emergency room with multiple traumas. There
was no specific finding on CT scan of the other hospital performed 55 days before admission. However, CT scan at the time of admission
showed common bile duct (CBD) stenosis, proximal biliary dilatation and bile lake formation at the segment II and III. Endoscopic retrograde
biliary drainage was performed, but the tube had slipped off spontaneously 36 days later, and follow-up CT scan showed aggravated
proximal biliary dilatation above the stricture site. He underwent excision of the CBD including the stricture site, and the bile
duct was reconstructed with Roux-en-Y hepaticojejunostomy. Pathologic report of the resected specimen revealed that the evidence of
trauma as a cause of bile duct stricture. While non-iatrogenic extrahepatic biliary trauma is uncommon, a level of suspicion is necessary
to identify injuries to the extrahepatic bile duct. The role of the physicians who treat the abused children should encompass being suspicious
for potential abdominal injury as well as identifying visible injuries.