Abstract
Drug-induced liver injury describes the result of toxicity to the liver from offending drugs and/or their metabolites. Most cases are acute and resolve quickly after the medication is discontinued. It is a diagnosis of exclusion after ruling out other causes of liver injury, such as infectious and autoimmune etiologies. When drug-induced liver injury is suspected, the culprit can be determined by establishing a temporal relationship between drug exposure and the development of signs and symptoms of liver injury. In this case presentation, we discuss a patient who developed liver injury from pyridostigmine in the management of acute colonic pseudo-obstruction (Ogilvie syndrome).