A male patient in his sixties with a long-term history of schizophrenia had been received glycerin enema once or twice a week in a mental hospital. He was emergently transferred to our hospital due to fever, vomiting, hematuria, and dyspnea. Laboratory findings on admission showed an elevation of white blood cells indicating inflammation, hemolysis, and renal dysfunction. Plain CT showed pleural effusion and ascites, elevated levels of perirectal fat, in addition to extraintestinal gas. Based on these findings, he was diagnosed with rectal damage caused by the glycerin enema and associated hemolysis with acute renal failure. He was kept under conditions of nil by mouth and received intravenous antibiotics, diuretic drug, and haptoglobin. Eventually, his condition improved with these conservative therapies. In this case, it is assumed that the hemolysis was caused by the influx of glycerin in the cytoplasm and an increase of osmotic pressure. Care should be taken during glycerin enema, which is widely used in daily practice as well as in home care settings.