Patients with liver abscess often require monitoring and treatment in the intensive care unit due to severe infection, systemic inflammatory response, or even failure of other organs (e.g., shock, renal failure, respiratory failure, etc.). Treatment and organ function monitoring often focus on vital organs such as the heart, lungs, liver and kidneys, with less attention to other organs. Some patients who experience vision loss during treatment or develop abnormal visualization should promptly request a specialist examination in ophthalmology, and ocular ultrasound is mandatory. Intraocular infections can lead to vision loss in mild cases and blindness in severe cases. Intraocular infections should be treated surgically as soon as possible. Not only intraocular infection, but liver abscess in one part can also form abscesses in other parts of the liver, and there are also cases of myocardial abscesses. A patient once died suddenly after a liver abscess had improved, but the autopsy results turned out to be a myocardial abscess. The reason why patients with liver abscesses develop infections at distant sites is related to the fact that the liver is rich in blood flow and the infecting bacteria are “planted” in other sites along the blood stream.