Neurological medical malpractice. - Free Online Library
The key to litigating these cases successfully is understanding how
the neurological injuries occurred and how they could have been avoided.
The difficulty in trying neurological and neurosurgical
medical
malpractice Improper, unskilled, or negligent treatment of a patient by a physician, dentist, nurse, pharmacist, or other health care professional. cases is in attorneys' failure to completely understand
the pathologic basis for clients' injuries and how these injuries
could have been avoided. Once the attorney understands basic
neurological and neurosurgical anatomy, physiology, and
pathophysiology pathophysiology /patho·phys·i·ol·o·gy/ (-fiz?e-ol´ah-je) the physiology of disordered function.
path·o·phys·i·ol·o·gy
n.
1. ,
these cases can be effectively screened and successfully litigated.
Neurological and neurosurgical cases involve
intracranial intracranial /in·tra·cra·ni·al/ (-kra´ne-al) within the cranium.
in·tra·cra·ni·al
adj.
Within the cranium. processes, such as a
compressive com·pres·sive
adj.
Serving to or able to compress.
com·pres
sive·ly adv. ischemic Ischemic
An inadequate supply of blood to a part of the body, caused by partial or total blockage of an artery.
Mentioned in: Antiangiogenic Therapy, Subarachnoid Hemorrhage, Ventricular Fibrillation
ischemic injury or an infection, that
adversely affect the brain or
spinal cord spinal cord, the part of the nervous system occupying the hollow interior (vertebral canal) of the series of vertebrae that form the spinal column, technically known as the vertebral column. , collectively referred to as
the central nervous system.
The brain and spinal cord are key to overall anatomic integrity,
physiologic well-being, and basic survival. The brain is the seat of
vital functions, including respirations and heart rate and rhythm. It is
encased en·case
tr.v. en·cased, en·cas·ing, en·cas·es
To enclose in or as if in a case.
en·case
ment n. within a bony
cranial vault cranial vault Obstetrics The bones that form the movable part of the fetal skull–bones–2 frontal, 2 parietal, occipital, and mold themselves to the ♀ birth canal, allowing passage of a cephalic-presenting infant and attached at its base to the
spinal cord, an
appendage appendage /ap·pen·dage/ (ah-pen´dij) a subordinate portion of a structure, or an outgrowth, such as a tail.
epiploic appendages see under appendix . of nervous tissue that enters the skull
through an opening called the
foramen magnum foramen mag·num
n.
See great foramen.
Foramen magnum
The opening at the base of the skull, through which the spinal cord and the brainstem pass. . The spinal cord is
protected by the
spinal column spinal column, bony column forming the main structural support of the skeleton of humans and other vertebrates, also known as the vertebral column or backbone. It consists of segments known as vertebrae linked by intervertebral disks and held together by ligaments. . It ends in a tail of nervous tissue
called the
cauda equina cauda e·qui·na
n.
The bundle of spinal nerve roots running through the lower part of the subarachnoid space within the vertebral canal below the first lumbar vertebra. , or horse's tail, ultimately ending in the
filum terminale.
The brain and spinal cord are protected by membranes called the
meninges meninges (mĭnĭn`jēz), three membranous layers of connective tissue that envelop the brain and spinal cord (see nervous system). The outermost layer, or dura mater, is extremely tough and is fused with the membranous lining of the skull. . Within the protective meninges and surrounding the brain and
spinal cord is a fluid cushion known as cerebral
spinal fluid spinal fluid
n.
See cerebrospinal fluid. . This
fluid flows from and circulates through a series of receptacles
collectively referred to as the ventricular system.
Oxygen and nutrients are supplied to the brain through a series of
blood vessels Blood vessels
Tubular channels for blood transport, of which there are three principal types: arteries, capillaries, and veins. Only the larger arteries and veins in the body bear distinct names. that enter the brain through paired
carotid arteries Carotid arteries
The four principal arteries of the neck and head. There are two common carotid arteries, each of which divides into the two main branches (internal and external).
Mentioned in: Endarterectomy that
branch off to various parts of the nervous tissue. By-products of
metabolism are removed via a series of vessels that arise within the
brain and exit through paired jugular veins. Similarly, oxygen and
nutrients flow to the spinal cord through a series of arteries, and
metabolic wastes are removed via a series of veins. Any disruption of
blood flow either to or from the central nervous system can disrupt the
production, circulation, and removal of cerebral spinal fluid and create
a catastrophic event in the brain or spinal cord that could result in
significant disease or death.
The brain and spinal cord are further protected from harmful
substances that circulate in the bloodstream by a
blood-brain barrier blood-brain barrier
n. Abbr. BBB
A physiological mechanism that alters the permeability of brain capillaries so that some substances, such as certain drugs, are prevented from entering brain tissue, while other substances are allowed to , a
series of small, tightly sealed capillaries that inhibit the movement of
potentially toxic substances into the brain. Although the blood-brain
barrier is inherently protective, under certain circumstances, including
infection, the barrier's capillaries can become "leaky."
When that happens, toxins, including microorganisms, can enter and
injure the brain or spinal cord.
Compressive ischemic injury
The skull is a closed compartment. Pressure within it is generated
by the mass of the brain and the volume of cerebral spinal fluid.
Pressure within the brain is called
intracranial pressure intracranial pressure
n. Abbr. ICP
Pressure within the cranial cavity.
intracranial pressure (in´tr , which
reflects both pressure being exerted from outside the brain and pressure
being exerted on the spinal cord.
In adults, the skull is rigid and cannot accommodate changes in
pressure from within. In children, the skull may expand, protecting the
brain from compressive injury. At birth, infants' skulls have
openings, or fontanels, that expand when pressure within the brain
increases. Later, when the fontanels close, the skull can no longer
expand.
If there is too much intracranial pressure, blood flow to the brain
can be interrupted, causing ischemia, or localized decreased perfusion.
If the ischemia continues unabated, the tissue--deprived of oxygen,
nutrients, or both--will die. This is called necrosis.
Blood vessels leading to or arising within the brain and spinal
cord can be injured and bleed. When bleeding occurs from a vein or an
artery, blood will collect in the cranial vault and ultimately compress
the brain, raising the intracranial pressure. Under extreme
circumstances, these compressive forces coax the brain to move away from
those forces. The brain may move down and through the foramen magnum, a
condition called
herniation herniation /her·ni·a·tion/ (her?ne-a´shun) abnormal protrusion of an organ or other body structure through a defect or natural opening in a covering, membrane, muscle, or bone. , which often results in death.
Compression can also occur in the spine, affecting the spinal cord.
However, the mechanism is slightly different. The spine is composed of
individual bones that become progressively larger from head to tail. The
smallest
vertebrae Vertebrae
Bones in the cervical, thoracic, and lumbar regions of the body that make up the vertebral column. Vertebrae have a central foramen (hole), and their superposition makes up the vertebral canal that encloses the spinal cord. are close to the skull, and the largest are at the
base of the spine. This arrangement allows the larger vertebrae to
withstand the pressure generated by body mass, which increases in a
descending fashion toward the base of the spine.
The spinal cord is protected in a ring formed by the column of
vertebrae. The individual vertebrae are separated from each other by
intervertebral intervertebral /in·ter·ver·te·bral/ (-ver´te-bral) situated between two contiguous vertebrae; see under disk.
in·ter·ver·te·bral
adj.
Located between vertebrae. disks that act as cushions against the forces applied by
movement of the spine. The disk material can become diseased, slip, or
become dislodged, a condition called herniation. Disk material can slip
from side to side (lateral herniation) or from back to front (central
herniation) and, in doing so, can apply undue compressive forces on the
soft spinal cord and nerve roots that emanate from the spinal cord. As
with the brain, if the compressive forces are applied for too long,
blood flow to the spinal cord can be compromised, leading to permanent
nerve tissue nerve tissue
n.
A highly differentiated tissue composed of nerve cells, nerve fibers, dendrites, and neuroglia. injury, the manifestations of which vary depending on the
site of injury.
Infection
Infection in the central nervous system can do much damage.
Organisms can enter the brain either through a break, or breach, in the
skull or spinal column or via the bloodstream, across the blood-brain
barrier. The infection generally first involves the
meningeal me·nin·ge·al
adj.
Of, relating to, or affecting the meninges.
meningeal
pertaining to the meninges.
meningeal hemorrhage coverings,
creating infectious meningitis. Organisms can also gain access through
drains placed directly into the cerebral spinal fluid ventricular system
for therapeutic reasons, resulting in ventriculitis. Microorganisms can
also penetrate the brain substance, resulting in cerebritis or a
brain
abscess Brain Abscess Definition
Brain abscess is a bacterial infection within the brain.
Description
The brain is usually well insulated from infection by bacteria, protected by the skull, the meninges (tissue layers surrounding the brain), . Cerebritis usually results from direct inoculation or
viral
infection viral infection,
n an infection by a pathogenic virus. A virus acts on the cell nucleus, taking over the genetic material within the nucleus and replicating itself. .
Early diagnosis and treatment of
bacterial meningitis bacterial meningitis Acute bacterial meningitis Neurology Meningeal inflammation caused by bacteria which, if untreated, is often fatal, or associated with significant sequelae Epidemiology 60% are community-acquired–CM, 40% nosocomial–NM Predisposing can prevent
lasting injury and significant neurologic impairment. In most instances,
it can be effectively treated in its early stages with a course of
intravenous antibiotics.
The exception to the potential medical malpractice case based on an
infection is when the infection is caused by a virus. Under these
circumstances, the focus of early diagnosis shifts from active
intervention to support. Unfortunately, to date there is ongoing debate
as to the effects of antiviral drugs. Attorneys who pursue medical
malpractice cases involving viral infection should direct their efforts
toward proving the need for early hospitalization and support, which
could have diminished, if not totally eradicated, the results of the
viral process.
No drugs have been developed to provide a sure cure for a viral
central nervous system infection. To try to prove at trial that early
treatment of a viral infection would have eradicated it and prevented
lasting injury may prove futile.
Taking the case
Once the attorney has determined that a neurological case may prove
meritorious, the next step is to obtain the appropriate medical records
that relate to the injury and also those from before and after the
injury. Lack of proof of negligent acts that took place before and after
the injury may help show that the client's injuries occurred at the
hands of the defendants. The attorney must be certain of the negligence
and never lose sight of the
proximate proximate /prox·i·mate/ (prok´si-mit) immediate or nearest.
prox·i·mate
adj.
Closely related in space, time, or order; very near; proximal.
proximate
immediate; nearest. causation and damages.
When reviewing medical records, the attorney should keep in mind
the so-called window of opportunity and point of irreversible injury.
Both help to define or clarify negligence.
The window of opportunity refers to the time during which treatment
has the best chance of preventing lasting injury. The point of
irreversible injury refers to the point at which a patient can make a
complete recovery versus the point at which there may be lasting injury.
That should not be interpreted to mean that treatment beyond the window
of opportunity or past the point of irreversible injury will no longer
be beneficial. The outcome is just no longer certain.
No one can predict with 100 percent accuracy the exact length of
the window of opportunity or the point of irreversible injury. The times
vary from patient to patient and depend on the magnitude and duration of
the injurious forces balanced against the reserves of the patient, such
as age and immune system integrity. In most cases, earlier diagnosis and
treatment could only have been beneficial and delay in treatment could
only have been harmful.
After the attorney has gathered and reviewed the client's
medical records, the case should be submitted for formal review by a
qualified medical expert. Generally, a qualified medical expert is
someone who has the requisite education, skill, knowledge, and expertise
to evaluate the case and form an opinion based on knowledge of standards
of medical care, the mechanism of the injury, and the likelihood that
such an injury could have been avoided. No expert can be 100 percent
certain, but he or she should be able to honestly assess the care and be
able to render an opinion with a reasonable degree of medical certainty.
Once the expert has found strong evidence of medical malpractice,
the attorney should make sure that the case pleadings are consistent
with the information in the medical records and accurately reflect the
anticipated testimony of the medical consultant. Discovery should be
directed at clarifying issues raised by the expert to uncover not only
potential defense arguments but also weak points and conflicts in
defendants' testimony. During depositions, it is always a good idea
to question defendants about their opinions of the cause of the
client's injury.
At trial, simplicity should be the rule. Although jurors want to
understand the facts of the case, they become bored with complex
explanations. They need to learn the medicine in an organized manner.
By calling the defendant as the first witness and asking carefully
crafted questions, the attorney can prove many of the elements of the
plaintiff's case and teach the jury much of the medicine. The
attorney should ask questions that, regardless of the defendant's
response, make it clear that the defendant departed from the standard of
care and that the departure was the proximate cause of the
plaintiff's injuries.
The defendant's testimony should be followed with testimony
from the plaintiff's experts. They should establish a
prima facie
case prima facie case n. a plaintiff's lawsuit or a criminal charge which appears at first blush to be "open and shut." (See: prima facie) and provide a basis for their opinions, giving the jury another
opportunity to understand the medicine. The client's testimony can
be used to establish damages.
The number of experts plaintiff's counsel presents is never as
important to a jury as their quality, sincerity, demeanor, and ability
to relate to the jurors. Experts may be extraordinarily knowledgeable or
erudite, but if they cannot be understood by the average
juror juror n. any person who actually serves on a jury. Lists of potential jurors are chosen from various sources such as registered voters, automobile registration or telephone directories. , their
testimony will not be convincing. The attorney should tell them to
clearly, concisely, and simply explain the mechanism of the injury, the
standards of care Standards of care are medical or psychological treatment guidelines, and can be general or specific. They specify appropriate treatment protocols based on scientific evidence, and collaboration between medical and/or psychological professionals involved in the treatment of a given , and the lasting effects of the negligence on the
plaintiff.
One expert usually is not sufficient in a neurological injury case
because the defense can easily claim that the expert's opinion is
untruthful and flawed, and the plaintiff will be left with no
corroborating testimony. This tactic can place the plaintiff's case
at great risk. On the other hand, by using a number of experts,
plaintiff's counsel runs the risk of having them contradict each
other.
To avoid this problem, experts should be prepared carefully before
trial and should not be pushed to testify beyond the scope of their
expertise. This most assuredly results in failure.
The following cases illustrate some points that have been
addressed.
Case Number 1: Compressive ischemic injury to the brain
Betty Ross was a 45-year-old housewife who died about eight hours
after being released from a hospital emergency room. She had battled
alcoholism for five years.
On January 5, 1994, she spent the evening at a local bar. As she
was leaving, she stumbled, striking her head on a door frame. Friends
took her to the local hospital for examination.
In the emergency room, Mrs. Ross was lethargic, drowsy, and
somewhat combative. An ER physician examined her and ordered a plain
X-ray of her skull and a reading of her blood-alcohol level. The X-rays
were interpreted as negative for any pathology, and her blood-alcohol
level was high.
Mrs. Ross was diagnosed as being
intoxicated in·tox·i·cate
v. in·tox·i·cat·ed, in·tox·i·cat·ing, in·tox·i·cates
v.tr.
1. To stupefy or excite by the action of a chemical substance such as alcohol.
2. and moved to a
stretcher to "sleep it off." Emergency room personnel called a
neurologist, who said there was no need for him to see Mrs. Ross unless
her X-rays were interpreted as positive for any pathology. An emergency
room nurse called Mrs. Ross's husband, who told the nurse that his
wife frequently went on drinking binges and that he would come to get
her in the morning.
After about five hours, the emergency room nurse was able to wake
Mrs. Ross, but her level of consciousness and behavior had not improved.
At 7 a.m., the ER physician concluded that she was drunk and could go
home with her husband.
When her husband arrived, she was barely responsive. Mr. Ross told
the nurses that this behavior was odd, as she was generally better after
a long period of sleep. They assured him that she merely needed to
"sleep it off" some more. The nurses then carried her to her
husband's car.
At home, Mr. Ross opened the car door, and Mrs. Ross fell out. He
carried her into the house and put her
on the couch On the Couch is an Australian television program formally broadcast on the Fox Footy Channel and it focuses on the current issues in the AFL. This is now broadcast on Fox Sports after the closure of Fox Footy Channel.
The show airs on Monday night and is hosted by Gerard Healy. to sleep. He checked
on her frequently, but he found no improvement. At about 3 p.m., he
noticed she was not breathing. He called an ambulance, and she was taken
back to the hospital, where she was pronounced dead on arrival.
An autopsy revealed a massive subdural hematoma with brain
compression and herniation. In addition, there was a seemingly
insignificant skull fracture.
At trial, the defense argued that the minimal standard of care had
been met--that at the time of Mrs. Ross's arrival at the emergency
room, there were no findings consistent with a significant head injury,
and the most likely diagnosis was alcohol intoxication. The defense said
that Mr. Ross was
culpable Blameworthy; involving the commission of a fault or the breach of a duty imposed by law.
Culpability generally implies that an act performed is wrong but does not involve any evil intent by the wrongdoer. since he should have taken his wife back to
the emergency room within a reasonable length of time.
Mr. Ross's attorneys called two experts. The first, an
emergency room physician, testified that had Mrs. Ross merely been
demonstrating the effects of intoxication, her condition would have
improved throughout the night as her body metabolized the alcohol. He
also said that the applicable standard of care required the doctor to
conduct hourly neurological checks, which would have shown a pattern
consistent with deterioration of mental status and level of
consciousness.
The expert said a
neurosurgeon neurosurgeon
a physician who specializes in neurosurgery.
neurosurgeon A surgeon specialized in managing diseases of the brain, spine and peripheral nerves Meat & potatoes diseases Brain tumors, spinal cord disease Salary $245K + 15% bonus. , not a neurologist, should have been
called within the first few hours to examine Mrs. Ross and determine
whether her condition was due to a significant head injury or alcohol
intoxication or both. A neurosurgeon would have probably determined that
her unimproved level of consciousness and lack of responsiveness were
due to both conditions. The expert also said that Mr. Ross could not
have been expected to recognize a serious neurological emergency,
particularly when it had been missed by the defendants.
The second expert, a neurosurgeon, testified that the head injury
caused
edema edema (ĭdē`mə), abnormal accumulation of fluid in the body tissues or in the body cavities causing swelling or distention of the affected parts. , or swelling of the brain, and together with the collection
of blood in the subdural space produced a deterioration in Mrs.
Ross's level of consciousness and neurological status. The failure
of the emergency room physician and the neurologist to properly examine
her to find the cause of her lethargy, combativeness, and unconscious
state allowed blood to accumulate, which ultimately caused brain
compression and herniation, the proximate cause of her death.
The expert faulted the emergency room personnel for not recognizing
that a simple case of alcohol intoxication would have resulted in an
improvement, not a deterioration, of mental status and consciousness. He
faulted the neurologist for failing to see Mrs. Ross and for failing to
suggest that a CT scan be ordered for detection of intracranial
hemorrhage.
The jurors deliberated for four hours, during which they asked that
testimony related to Mrs. Ross's condition at admission and
discharge be read back. They rendered a verdict on behalf of the
plaintiff.
Case Number 2: Ischemic compression
Timmy Trent is blind and deaf following admission to the hospital
as a toddler for treatment of
hydrocephalus hydrocephalus (hī'drəsĕf`ələs), also known as water on the brain, developmental (congenital) or acquired condition in which there is an abnormal accumulation of body fluids within the skull. ,
increased intracranial
pressure increased intracranial pressure Intracranial hypertension, see there due to a dysfunction within the cerebral spinal fluid pathways.
A shunt was placed in the ventricular system of his brain. But the
procedure was done too late to reverse the effects of prolonged,
increased intracranial pressure.
From the day Timmy was born, his health was monitored by Dr. Welch,
an old-time pediatrician. Ms. Trent faithfully brought Timmy for his
well-baby checkups. He seemed to be growing and developing normally
except that when Timmy was about eight months old, Ms. Trent thought his
head was unusually large. She told Dr. Welch that it was difficult to
get a baseball cap to fit him and that she could barely pull a polo
shirt over his head.
Dr. Welch laughed and told Ms. Trent that a baby's body grows
at different rates. He reassured her that all was well.
By the time Timmy was a year old, he was vomiting frequently, and
Ms. Trent thought he had become somewhat irritable. At 13 months, he did
not seem as responsive to toys as he had in the past. Ms.Trent told Dr.
Welch that bright-colored toys did not elicit a response and that Timmy
did not seem to notice objects around him. Once again, Dr. Welch assured
her that her son's development was as expected and consistent with
children his age.
One morning, Ms. Trent noticed that Timmy's eyes looked
strange. The whites were visible above his irises. She called Dr.
Welch's office, but he was out sick. She was told to take Timmy to
Dr. Burnes, the covering pediatrician. Dr. Burnes took one look at Timmy
and was visibly concerned. He measured his head with a tape measure,
something Ms. Trent had seen Dr. Welch do only once or twice.
Dr. Burnes told Ms. Trent that Timmy appeared to have hydrocephalus
with a bulging
fontanel fontanel (fŏn`tənĕl'): see skull.
fontanel
or fontanelle
One of six soft spots at the junctions (sutures) of the cranial bones in an infant's skull, covered with tough, fibrous membrane. . He said the peculiar appearance of his eyes, a
"setting sun" sign, was consistent with hydrocephalus, as was
the vomiting.
Timmy went from Dr. Burnes's office to the emergency room,
where a
pediatric pediatric /pe·di·at·ric/ (pe?de-at´rik) pertaining to the health of children.
pe·di·at·ric
adj.
Of or relating to pediatrics. neurosurgeon and a neurologist evaluated him. They
diagnosed him with hydrocephalus, and within hours he was in the
operating room, where doctors inserted a ventricular-peritoneal shunt.
The shunt would remove excess cerebral spinal fluid from the brain and
divert it into the peritoneal cavity.
After the surgery, Timmy seemed more alert and active. His head
circumference started to return to a size more typical for a child his
age. However, the neurosurgeon said that Timmy could not see and that he
might not regain his vision. The neurosurgeon said the hydrocephalus had
been present for so long that it exerted pressure on the optic nerves to
the point of an irreversible ischemic injury.
At trial, the defense argued that there was no good reason to
conclude that Timmy's vision loss was part of the constellation of
defects that led to hydrocephalus. The defense pediatric neurologist
testified that the same problem that had caused the blindness caused the
hydrocephalus. He claimed that by the time the hydrocephalus could have
been diagnosed, the irreversible injury would have already occurred.
The defense also called a pediatrician who testified that there is
no need to measure a child's head circumference during the first
year. The doctor said that up to Timmy's first birthday, the size
of his head had been normal. The doctor based his opinion not on
objective measurements but on Dr. Welch's 50 years of experience as
a pediatrician.
The Trents' case was based on negligent pediatric care. A
pediatrician and a pediatric neurologist both testified to support that
claim. The pediatrician said that the signs and symptoms of
hydrocephalus were present at least since Timmy was eight months old.
The pediatrician testified that Dr. Welch failed to take regular
measurements of Timmy's head, as was required by the prevailing
standard of care. He also said that even without those measurements, Dr.
Welch had the information he needed to diagnose hydrocephalus.
Ms. Trent had made repeated references to the abnormal size of
Timmy's head. The expert showed the jury photographs of Timmy taken
at his first birthday party, which showed an abnormal-sized head and the
classic setting-sun sign.
The pediatric neurologist testified that the longer hydrocephalus
remains untreated, the more likely the risk of permanent optic nerve
injury. The expert said that the only time blindness occurs in children
with hydrocephalus is when treatment is delayed. He testified that the
injury was a direct result of Dr. Welch's failure to timely
diagnose and refer Timmy for treatment that would have prevented lasting
injury.
The jurors deliberated for about six hours, during which they
requested the photographs of Timmy's first birthday party. The jury
rendered a verdict in favor of the Trents.
Case Number 3: Compressive ischemic injury to the spinal cord
In the summer of 1992, Judy Clark, age 18, was a counselor at Camp
Big Horn, where she taught and supervised students as they shot rifles
at clay targets. Ms. Clark was helping a camper when the gun accidently
discharged. The force of the shot caused Ms. Clark to twist and bend
backward. Within hours of the incident, her back hurt.
The camp doctor prescribed muscle relaxants and told Ms. Clark she
needed to be re-evaluated the next day. By the following morning, she
could not get out of bed. The camp doctor was summoned, and he
prescribed rest and a heating pad. Another day passed, and Ms. Clark
still did not feel right. She was also having trouble urinating.
Ms.Clark called her parents, who had her transported by ambulance to a
hospital in their home city.
At the emergency room, Ms. Clark complained of numbness in her
inner thighs and a peculiar feeling that she had to
urinate urinate /uri·nate/ (u´ri-nat) to discharge urine.
u·ri·nate
v.
To excrete urine.
urinate
to void urine. . Ms. Clark
was admitted on a Saturday morning, but it was not until the following
Monday morning that doctors ordered an
MRI 1. (application) MRI - Magnetic Resonance Imaging.
2. MRI - Measurement Requirements and Interface. of her spine, after which
they diagnosed nerve-root compression.
A neurosurgeon examined Ms. Clark and reviewed the films. He sent
her to the operating room immediately, where the affected disk was
removed. After surgery, the neurosurgeon reported that the pressure on
the nerve roots had been relieved.
Ms. Clark soon recovered from the anesthesia but reported no change
in the way she felt. Over the next several months, she still had
numbness in her thighs and rectal and vaginal areas and an inability to
urinate or have a bowel movement. She had to learn how to
catheterize cath·e·ter·ize
v.
To introduce a catheter into.
cath
e·ter·i·za her bladder and was placed on a regimen of
laxatives Laxatives Definition
Laxatives are products that promote bowel movements.
Purpose
Laxatives are used to treat constipation—the passage of small amounts of hard, dry stools, usually fewer than three times a week. and stool
softeners.
At trial, the defense called a neurosurgeon, who testified that by
the time Ms. Clark had arrived at the hospital the window of opportunity
had passed and the timing of the surgery was no longer an issue. The
defense argued that the camp doctor was responsible for Ms. Clark's
injuries.
Ms. Clark's attorneys called a neurosurgeon, who testified
that the window of opportunity extended past the transport to the
hospital, as evidenced by Ms. Clark's progressive loss of
neurological function, including bladder and bowel function, up to the
hours before surgery. The expert said her condition was an emergency
when her bladder and bowel function were compromised. He said the camp
doctor's failure to recognize an emergency and the hospital's
failure to have a neurosurgical consultant perform emergency
decompressive surgery were proximate causes of her loss of bladder and
bowel control.
The expert also testified that there was no medical reason for the
hospital not to have obtained the diagnostic studies or call a
neurosurgeon immediately to perform the surgery. By delaying, the expert
said, the hospital's window of opportunity to prevent permanent
injury was lost.
The neurosurgeon also said the bladder and bowel injury was
foreseeable and that the outcome could have been avoided with earlier
diagnosis and treatment.
The jurors deliberated about 12 hours. They concluded that both the
camp doctor and the hospital were negligent and
apportioned ap·por·tion
tr.v. ap·por·tioned, ap·por·tion·ing, ap·por·tions
To divide and assign according to a plan; allot: "The tendency persists to apportion blame as suits the circumstances" liability
between them.
Practical tips
These example cases are by no means all-inclusive but are intended
to illustrate the issues that are central to neurological and
neurosurgical cases. The following tips may help in selecting
meritorious cases and handling them successfully.
* Be clear as to the nature of the injury.
* Understand the pathological mechanism that caused the injury.
* Be certain that the injury was foreseeable and avoidable.
* Be convinced that any other cause for the injury can be logically
ruled out.
* Consult experts who will render honest, but not necessarily
favorable, opinions.
Litigating these cases can be satisfying. Clients can be
compensated for others' negligence, and attorneys can feel
gratified grat·i·fy
tr.v. grat·i·fied, grat·i·fy·ing, grat·i·fies
1. To please or satisfy: His achievement gratified his father. See Synonyms at please.
2. for having taken a complex medical scenario and clearly
explaining it to jurors.
Medical negligence documents from the
ATLA ATLA Association of Trial Lawyers of America
ATLA American Theological Library Association
ATLA American Trial Lawyers Association
ATLA Air Transport Licensing Authority (Hong Kong)
ATLA Avatar: The Last Airbender Exchange
The documents listed below and many others on topics pertaining to
medical negligence
litigation An action brought in court to enforce a particular right. The act or process of bringing a lawsuit in and of itself; a judicial contest; any dispute.
When a person begins a civil lawsuit, the person enters into a process called litigation. are available from the ATLA Exchange. For
more information, visit the Exchange Web site at
http://exchange.atla.org, or contact the Exchange by phone at (800)
344-3023 or by fax at (202) 337-0977.
Emergency rooms
American National Bank v. Lutheran General Hospital. Deposition of
the defendant's emergency medicine expert in a case alleging
failure to diagnose failure to diagnose,
n a failure to assess a patient's condition. Harm may be inflicted by the failure to administer treatment to a potentially treatable condition. aortic dissection. (No. PN-466.)
Arline v. St. Elizabeth Hospital. Deposition of a medical expert
and the parties' primary
interrogatories Written questions submitted to a party from his or her adversary to ascertain answers that are prepared in writing and signed under oath and that have relevance to the issues in a lawsuit. , objections, and answers
in a case alleging failure to administer a tetanus shot. (No. PN-376.)
DeMario v.
St. Francis Medical Center St. Francis Medical Center may refer to: - St. Francis Medical Center — Lynwood, California
- OSF St. Francis Medical Center — Peoria, Illinois
- St. Francis Regional Medical Center — Shakopee, Minnesota
- St.
. The plaintiff's
complaint and motion for application of state law and the final
pretrial pre·tri·al
n.
A proceeding held before an official trial, especially to clarify points of law and facts.
adj.
1. Of or relating to a pretrial.
2. order in a case in which the plaintiff alleged an emergency room
physician had failed to diagnose a bowel obstruction. (No. PN-3210.)
Kaberline v. Martha Washington Hospital. The plaintiff's
complaint alleging an internist negligently failed to diagnose his
cervical fracture and to remove his cervical collar before his spine was
stabilized. (No. PN-215.)
Manship v. Coastal Emergency Services. The plaintiff's
memoranda in opposition to the defendants' summary judgment motions
in a case alleging failure to properly treat an infection. (No. PN-480.)
Emergency Medical Treatment and Active Labor Act The Emergency Medical Treatment and Active Labor Act (, EMTALA) is a United States Act of Congress passed in 1986 as part of the Consolidated Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act. (
EMTALA EMTALA Emergency Medical Treatment & Active Labor Act, see there )
Hewett v. Inland Hospital. The plaintiff's response to the
defendants' motion to stay and incorporated memorandum of law and
the defendants' supplemental memorandum regarding jurisdiction and
the plaintiff's objections in a case holding state notice and
prelitigation screening requirements for medical negligence claims are
inapplicable to an EMTALA claim. (No. PN-617.)
Lopez-Soto v. Hawayek. The plaintiffs' appellate briefs in a
case holding that EMTALA's screening and stabilization requirements
should be read separately. (No. PN-622.)
Paz de Castellanos v. Sociedad Espanola de Auxilio Mutuo y
Beneficencia de Puerto Rico. The plaintiff's complaint and revised
joint pretrial memorandum in a case alleging a hospital and several
doctors had failed to properly examine, stabilize, or treat a pregnant
woman in labor before transferring her to a different facility. (No.
PN-624.)
Roberts v. Galen of Virginia, Inc. The parties' U.S. Supreme
Court briefs and an
amicus curiae brief Noun 1. amicus curiae brief - a brief presented by someone interested in influencing the outcome of a lawsuit but who is not a party to it
brief, legal brief - a document stating the facts and points of law of a client's case supporting the defendant in a
case holding it is unnecessary for a plaintiff to show a hospital's
improper motive to prove liability under EMTALA. (No. PN-603.)
Steele v. Anson County Hospital. The plaintiffs' memorandum
supporting partial summary judgment in a case alleging improper patient
"dumping" under EMTALA. (No. PN410.)
Employee Retirement Income Security Act The Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA), 29 U.S.C.A. § 1001 et seq. (1974), is a federal law that sets minimum standards for most voluntarily established Pension and health plans in private industry to provide protection for individuals enrolled in these plans. (
ERISA See Employee Retirement Income Security Act.
ERISA
See Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA). )
Dukes v. U.S. Healthcare, Inc. Appellate briefs of the plaintiffs
and
amicus curiae amicus curiae
(Latin: “friend of the court”) One who assists a court by furnishing information or advice regarding questions of law or fact. A person (or other entity, such as a state government) who is not a party to a particular lawsuit but nevertheless has a in a case holding federal courts lacked ERISA civil
enforcement
preemption preemption
U.S. policy that allowed the first settlers, or squatters, on public land to buy the land they had improved. Since improved land, coveted by speculators, was often priced too high for squatters to buy at auction, temporary preemptive laws allowed them to acquire jurisdiction over negligence claims against a
health maintenance organization. (No. PN-477.)
Frappier v. Wishnov. The parties' appellate briefs in a case
holding ERISA does not
preempt pre·empt or pre-empt
v. pre·empt·ed, pre·empt·ing, pre·empts
v.tr.
1. To appropriate, seize, or take for oneself before others. See Synonyms at appropriate.
2.
a. a vicarious liability claim against an
HMO HMO health maintenance organization.
HMO
n.
A corporation that is financed by insurance premiums and has member physicians and professional staff who provide curative and preventive medicine within certain financial, . (No. PN-525.)
Herrera v. Lovelace Health System, Inc. The plaintiff's motion
to remand, memorandum in support of the motion, the defendants'
response, and the plaintiff's reply in a case holding that a
man's claims alleging negligent
vasectomy vasectomy, male sterilization by surgical excision of the vas deferens, the thin duct that carries sperm cells from the testicles to the prostate and the penis. against a doctor and
health main tenance organization are not completely preempted by ERISA.
(No. PN-605.)
Shannon v. McNulty. The plaintiffs' appellate brief and the
Pennsylvania Trial Lawyers Association's amicus curiae brief in a
case holding an HMO may be liable under vicarious and corporate
liability theories. (No. PN-592.)
Laparoscopy laparoscopy
or peritoneoscopy
Procedure for inspecting the abdominal cavity using a laparoscope; also surgery requiring use of a laparoscope. Laparoscopes use fibre-optic lights and small video cameras to show tissues and organs on a monitor.
Abreu v. Nunez. The plaintiffs' depositions of experts and the
defendant in a case alleging a
gynecologist gynecologist /gy·ne·col·o·gist/ (-kol´ah-jist) a person skilled in gynecology.
gy·ne·col·o·gist
n.
A physician specializing in gynecology. negligently performed a
laparoscopy, resulting in a thermal burn of a woman's left
ureter ureter (y
rē`tər), thick-walled tube that conveys urine from the kidney to the urinary bladder. It is approximately 10 in. (25. .
(No. PN-411.)
Cataldi v. Wilson. Deposition of the plaintiffs' general
surgery expert in a case alleging negligent laparoscopic
cholecystectomy. (No. PN-512.)
Obstetrics
Brown v.
HCA HCA,
n.pr See acid, hydroxycitric. Highland Hospital Services. The plaintiffs'
supplemental petition on breach of contract, damages, attorney fees,
medical negligence, and loss of consortium in a case alleging hospital
liability for failure to monitor fetal distress. (No. PN-462.)
Hull v.
Cohen cohen
or kohen
(Hebrew: “priest”) Jewish priest descended from Zadok (a descendant of Aaron), priest at the First Temple of Jerusalem. The biblical priesthood was hereditary and male. . The defendant's deposition in a case alleging
use of excessive force in a delivery. (No. PN-379.)
Marlin v. Murdoch. The plaintiffs' trial brief in a case
alleging negligent delivery of an infant when shoulder dystocia was
encountered. (No. PN-414.)
Pisco Pisco (pēs`kō), city (1993 pop. 53,714), capital of Pisco prov., SW Peru, a port on the Pacific Ocean. The major industries are the production of the famous Pisco brandy, the cultivation and processing of cotton, and commercial fishing. v. Maternity Infant Care Family Planning Project. The
plaintiff's obstetrical expert's trial testimony in a case
alleging the defendant had negligently failed to rule out placenta
previa or timely administer tocolytic drugs. (No. PN-458.)
Wingo v. Rockford Memorial Hospital. Depositions of the
plaintiffs' obstetrics expert and the defendants' nursing
expert in a case in which the plaintiffs alleged improper discharge of a
pregnant woman with ruptured membranes. (No. PN-538.)
Brain injuries
Neurological and neurosurgical cases involve intracranial processes
that adversely affect the brain or spinal cord.
Harvey F. Wachsman, a doctor and an attorney, practices law in
Great Neck, New York Great Neck is a village in Nassau County, New York, in the U.S., on the North Shore of Long Island. As of the United States 2000 Census, the village population was 9,538.
The Village of Great Neck is in the Town of North Hempstead. . Carole L. Gutterman, a registered nurse, consults
with medical malpractice law firms.
The key to litigating these cases successfully is understanding how
the neurological injuries occurred and how they could have been avoided.
The difficulty in trying neurological and neurosurgical
medical
malpractice Improper, unskilled, or negligent treatment of a patient by a physician, dentist, nurse, pharmacist, or other health care professional. cases is in attorneys' failure to completely understand
the pathologic basis for clients' injuries and how these injuries
could have been avoided. Once the attorney understands basic
neurological and neurosurgical anatomy, physiology, and
pathophysiology pathophysiology /patho·phys·i·ol·o·gy/ (-fiz?e-ol´ah-je) the physiology of disordered function.
path·o·phys·i·ol·o·gy
n.
1. ,
these cases can be effectively screened and successfully litigated.
Neurological and neurosurgical cases involve
intracranial intracranial /in·tra·cra·ni·al/ (-kra´ne-al) within the cranium.
in·tra·cra·ni·al
adj.
Within the cranium. processes, such as a
compressive com·pres·sive
adj.
Serving to or able to compress.
com·pres
sive·ly adv. ischemic Ischemic
An inadequate supply of blood to a part of the body, caused by partial or total blockage of an artery.
Mentioned in: Antiangiogenic Therapy, Subarachnoid Hemorrhage, Ventricular Fibrillation
ischemic injury or an infection, that
adversely affect the brain or
spinal cord spinal cord, the part of the nervous system occupying the hollow interior (vertebral canal) of the series of vertebrae that form the spinal column, technically known as the vertebral column. , collectively referred to as
the central nervous system.
The brain and spinal cord are key to overall anatomic integrity,
physiologic well-being, and basic survival. The brain is the seat of
vital functions, including respirations and heart rate and rhythm. It is
encased en·case
tr.v. en·cased, en·cas·ing, en·cas·es
To enclose in or as if in a case.
en·case
ment n. within a bony
cranial vault cranial vault Obstetrics The bones that form the movable part of the fetal skull–bones–2 frontal, 2 parietal, occipital, and mold themselves to the ♀ birth canal, allowing passage of a cephalic-presenting infant and attached at its base to the
spinal cord, an
appendage appendage /ap·pen·dage/ (ah-pen´dij) a subordinate portion of a structure, or an outgrowth, such as a tail.
epiploic appendages see under appendix . of nervous tissue that enters the skull
through an opening called the
foramen magnum foramen mag·num
n.
See great foramen.
Foramen magnum
The opening at the base of the skull, through which the spinal cord and the brainstem pass. . The spinal cord is
protected by the
spinal column spinal column, bony column forming the main structural support of the skeleton of humans and other vertebrates, also known as the vertebral column or backbone. It consists of segments known as vertebrae linked by intervertebral disks and held together by ligaments. . It ends in a tail of nervous tissue
called the
cauda equina cauda e·qui·na
n.
The bundle of spinal nerve roots running through the lower part of the subarachnoid space within the vertebral canal below the first lumbar vertebra. , or horse's tail, ultimately ending in the
filum terminale.
The brain and spinal cord are protected by membranes called the
meninges meninges (mĭnĭn`jēz), three membranous layers of connective tissue that envelop the brain and spinal cord (see nervous system). The outermost layer, or dura mater, is extremely tough and is fused with the membranous lining of the skull. . Within the protective meninges and surrounding the brain and
spinal cord is a fluid cushion known as cerebral
spinal fluid spinal fluid
n.
See cerebrospinal fluid. . This
fluid flows from and circulates through a series of receptacles
collectively referred to as the ventricular system.
Oxygen and nutrients are supplied to the brain through a series of
blood vessels Blood vessels
Tubular channels for blood transport, of which there are three principal types: arteries, capillaries, and veins. Only the larger arteries and veins in the body bear distinct names. that enter the brain through paired
carotid arteries Carotid arteries
The four principal arteries of the neck and head. There are two common carotid arteries, each of which divides into the two main branches (internal and external).
Mentioned in: Endarterectomy that
branch off to various parts of the nervous tissue. By-products of
metabolism are removed via a series of vessels that arise within the
brain and exit through paired jugular veins. Similarly, oxygen and
nutrients flow to the spinal cord through a series of arteries, and
metabolic wastes are removed via a series of veins. Any disruption of
blood flow either to or from the central nervous system can disrupt the
production, circulation, and removal of cerebral spinal fluid and create
a catastrophic event in the brain or spinal cord that could result in
significant disease or death.
The brain and spinal cord are further protected from harmful
substances that circulate in the bloodstream by a
blood-brain barrier blood-brain barrier
n. Abbr. BBB
A physiological mechanism that alters the permeability of brain capillaries so that some substances, such as certain drugs, are prevented from entering brain tissue, while other substances are allowed to , a
series of small, tightly sealed capillaries that inhibit the movement of
potentially toxic substances into the brain. Although the blood-brain
barrier is inherently protective, under certain circumstances, including
infection, the barrier's capillaries can become "leaky."
When that happens, toxins, including microorganisms, can enter and
injure the brain or spinal cord.
Compressive ischemic injury
The skull is a closed compartment. Pressure within it is generated
by the mass of the brain and the volume of cerebral spinal fluid.
Pressure within the brain is called
intracranial pressure intracranial pressure
n. Abbr. ICP
Pressure within the cranial cavity.
intracranial pressure (in´tr , which
reflects both pressure being exerted from outside the brain and pressure
being exerted on the spinal cord.
In adults, the skull is rigid and cannot accommodate changes in
pressure from within. In children, the skull may expand, protecting the
brain from compressive injury. At birth, infants' skulls have
openings, or fontanels, that expand when pressure within the brain
increases. Later, when the fontanels close, the skull can no longer
expand.
If there is too much intracranial pressure, blood flow to the brain
can be interrupted, causing ischemia, or localized decreased perfusion.
If the ischemia continues unabated, the tissue--deprived of oxygen,
nutrients, or both--will die. This is called necrosis.
Blood vessels leading to or arising within the brain and spinal
cord can be injured and bleed. When bleeding occurs from a vein or an
artery, blood will collect in the cranial vault and ultimately compress
the brain, raising the intracranial pressure. Under extreme
circumstances, these compressive forces coax the brain to move away from
those forces. The brain may move down and through the foramen magnum, a
condition called
herniation herniation /her·ni·a·tion/ (her?ne-a´shun) abnormal protrusion of an organ or other body structure through a defect or natural opening in a covering, membrane, muscle, or bone. , which often results in death.
Compression can also occur in the spine, affecting the spinal cord.
However, the mechanism is slightly different. The spine is composed of
individual bones that become progressively larger from head to tail. The
smallest
vertebrae Vertebrae
Bones in the cervical, thoracic, and lumbar regions of the body that make up the vertebral column. Vertebrae have a central foramen (hole), and their superposition makes up the vertebral canal that encloses the spinal cord. are close to the skull, and the largest are at the
base of the spine. This arrangement allows the larger vertebrae to
withstand the pressure generated by body mass, which increases in a
descending fashion toward the base of the spine.
The spinal cord is protected in a ring formed by the column of
vertebrae. The individual vertebrae are separated from each other by
intervertebral intervertebral /in·ter·ver·te·bral/ (-ver´te-bral) situated between two contiguous vertebrae; see under disk.
in·ter·ver·te·bral
adj.
Located between vertebrae. disks that act as cushions against the forces applied by
movement of the spine. The disk material can become diseased, slip, or
become dislodged, a condition called herniation. Disk material can slip
from side to side (lateral herniation) or from back to front (central
herniation) and, in doing so, can apply undue compressive forces on the
soft spinal cord and nerve roots that emanate from the spinal cord. As
with the brain, if the compressive forces are applied for too long,
blood flow to the spinal cord can be compromised, leading to permanent
nerve tissue nerve tissue
n.
A highly differentiated tissue composed of nerve cells, nerve fibers, dendrites, and neuroglia. injury, the manifestations of which vary depending on the
site of injury.
Infection
Infection in the central nervous system can do much damage.
Organisms can enter the brain either through a break, or breach, in the
skull or spinal column or via the bloodstream, across the blood-brain
barrier. The infection generally first involves the
meningeal me·nin·ge·al
adj.
Of, relating to, or affecting the meninges.
meningeal
pertaining to the meninges.
meningeal hemorrhage coverings,
creating infectious meningitis. Organisms can also gain access through
drains placed directly into the cerebral spinal fluid ventricular system
for therapeutic reasons, resulting in ventriculitis. Microorganisms can
also penetrate the brain substance, resulting in cerebritis or a
brain
abscess Brain Abscess Definition
Brain abscess is a bacterial infection within the brain.
Description
The brain is usually well insulated from infection by bacteria, protected by the skull, the meninges (tissue layers surrounding the brain), . Cerebritis usually results from direct inoculation or
viral
infection viral infection,
n an infection by a pathogenic virus. A virus acts on the cell nucleus, taking over the genetic material within the nucleus and replicating itself. .
Early diagnosis and treatment of
bacterial meningitis bacterial meningitis Acute bacterial meningitis Neurology Meningeal inflammation caused by bacteria which, if untreated, is often fatal, or associated with significant sequelae Epidemiology 60% are community-acquired–CM, 40% nosocomial–NM Predisposing can prevent
lasting injury and significant neurologic impairment. In most instances,
it can be effectively treated in its early stages with a course of
intravenous antibiotics.
The exception to the potential medical malpractice case based on an
infection is when the infection is caused by a virus. Under these
circumstances, the focus of early diagnosis shifts from active
intervention to support. Unfortunately, to date there is ongoing debate
as to the effects of antiviral drugs. Attorneys who pursue medical
malpractice cases involving viral infection should direct their efforts
toward proving the need for early hospitalization and support, which
could have diminished, if not totally eradicated, the results of the
viral process.
No drugs have been developed to provide a sure cure for a viral
central nervous system infection. To try to prove at trial that early
treatment of a viral infection would have eradicated it and prevented
lasting injury may prove futile.
Taking the case
Once the attorney has determined that a neurological case may prove
meritorious, the next step is to obtain the appropriate medical records
that relate to the injury and also those from before and after the
injury. Lack of proof of negligent acts that took place before and after
the injury may help show that the client's injuries occurred at the
hands of the defendants. The attorney must be certain of the negligence
and never lose sight of the
proximate proximate /prox·i·mate/ (prok´si-mit) immediate or nearest.
prox·i·mate
adj.
Closely related in space, time, or order; very near; proximal.
proximate
immediate; nearest. causation and damages.
When reviewing medical records, the attorney should keep in mind
the so-called window of opportunity and point of irreversible injury.
Both help to define or clarify negligence.
The window of opportunity refers to the time during which treatment
has the best chance of preventing lasting injury. The point of
irreversible injury refers to the point at which a patient can make a
complete recovery versus the point at which there may be lasting injury.
That should not be interpreted to mean that treatment beyond the window
of opportunity or past the point of irreversible injury will no longer
be beneficial. The outcome is just no longer certain.
No one can predict with 100 percent accuracy the exact length of
the window of opportunity or the point of irreversible injury. The times
vary from patient to patient and depend on the magnitude and duration of
the injurious forces balanced against the reserves of the patient, such
as age and immune system integrity. In most cases, earlier diagnosis and
treatment could only have been beneficial and delay in treatment could
only have been harmful.
After the attorney has gathered and reviewed the client's
medical records, the case should be submitted for formal review by a
qualified medical expert. Generally, a qualified medical expert is
someone who has the requisite education, skill, knowledge, and expertise
to evaluate the case and form an opinion based on knowledge of standards
of medical care, the mechanism of the injury, and the likelihood that
such an injury could have been avoided. No expert can be 100 percent
certain, but he or she should be able to honestly assess the care and be
able to render an opinion with a reasonable degree of medical certainty.
Once the expert has found strong evidence of medical malpractice,
the attorney should make sure that the case pleadings are consistent
with the information in the medical records and accurately reflect the
anticipated testimony of the medical consultant. Discovery should be
directed at clarifying issues raised by the expert to uncover not only
potential defense arguments but also weak points and conflicts in
defendants' testimony. During depositions, it is always a good idea
to question defendants about their opinions of the cause of the
client's injury.
At trial, simplicity should be the rule. Although jurors want to
understand the facts of the case, they become bored with complex
explanations. They need to learn the medicine in an organized manner.
By calling the defendant as the first witness and asking carefully
crafted questions, the attorney can prove many of the elements of the
plaintiff's case and teach the jury much of the medicine. The
attorney should ask questions that, regardless of the defendant's
response, make it clear that the defendant departed from the standard of
care and that the departure was the proximate cause of the
plaintiff's injuries.
The defendant's testimony should be followed with testimony
from the plaintiff's experts. They should establish a
prima facie
case prima facie case n. a plaintiff's lawsuit or a criminal charge which appears at first blush to be "open and shut." (See: prima facie) and provide a basis for their opinions, giving the jury another
opportunity to understand the medicine. The client's testimony can
be used to establish damages.
The number of experts plaintiff's counsel presents is never as
important to a jury as their quality, sincerity, demeanor, and ability
to relate to the jurors. Experts may be extraordinarily knowledgeable or
erudite, but if they cannot be understood by the average
juror juror n. any person who actually serves on a jury. Lists of potential jurors are chosen from various sources such as registered voters, automobile registration or telephone directories. , their
testimony will not be convincing. The attorney should tell them to
clearly, concisely, and simply explain the mechanism of the injury, the
standards of care Standards of care are medical or psychological treatment guidelines, and can be general or specific. They specify appropriate treatment protocols based on scientific evidence, and collaboration between medical and/or psychological professionals involved in the treatment of a given , and the lasting effects of the negligence on the
plaintiff.
One expert usually is not sufficient in a neurological injury case
because the defense can easily claim that the expert's opinion is
untruthful and flawed, and the plaintiff will be left with no
corroborating testimony. This tactic can place the plaintiff's case
at great risk. On the other hand, by using a number of experts,
plaintiff's counsel runs the risk of having them contradict each
other.
To avoid this problem, experts should be prepared carefully before
trial and should not be pushed to testify beyond the scope of their
expertise. This most assuredly results in failure.
The following cases illustrate some points that have been
addressed.
Case Number 1: Compressive ischemic injury to the brain
Betty Ross was a 45-year-old housewife who died about eight hours
after being released from a hospital emergency room. She had battled
alcoholism for five years.
On January 5, 1994, she spent the evening at a local bar. As she
was leaving, she stumbled, striking her head on a door frame. Friends
took her to the local hospital for examination.
In the emergency room, Mrs. Ross was lethargic, drowsy, and
somewhat combative. An ER physician examined her and ordered a plain
X-ray of her skull and a reading of her blood-alcohol level. The X-rays
were interpreted as negative for any pathology, and her blood-alcohol
level was high.
Mrs. Ross was diagnosed as being
intoxicated in·tox·i·cate
v. in·tox·i·cat·ed, in·tox·i·cat·ing, in·tox·i·cates
v.tr.
1. To stupefy or excite by the action of a chemical substance such as alcohol.
2. and moved to a
stretcher to "sleep it off." Emergency room personnel called a
neurologist, who said there was no need for him to see Mrs. Ross unless
her X-rays were interpreted as positive for any pathology. An emergency
room nurse called Mrs. Ross's husband, who told the nurse that his
wife frequently went on drinking binges and that he would come to get
her in the morning.
After about five hours, the emergency room nurse was able to wake
Mrs. Ross, but her level of consciousness and behavior had not improved.
At 7 a.m., the ER physician concluded that she was drunk and could go
home with her husband.
When her husband arrived, she was barely responsive. Mr. Ross told
the nurses that this behavior was odd, as she was generally better after
a long period of sleep. They assured him that she merely needed to
"sleep it off" some more. The nurses then carried her to her
husband's car.
At home, Mr. Ross opened the car door, and Mrs. Ross fell out. He
carried her into the house and put her
on the couch On the Couch is an Australian television program formally broadcast on the Fox Footy Channel and it focuses on the current issues in the AFL. This is now broadcast on Fox Sports after the closure of Fox Footy Channel.
The show airs on Monday night and is hosted by Gerard Healy. to sleep. He checked
on her frequently, but he found no improvement. At about 3 p.m., he
noticed she was not breathing. He called an ambulance, and she was taken
back to the hospital, where she was pronounced dead on arrival.
An autopsy revealed a massive subdural hematoma with brain
compression and herniation. In addition, there was a seemingly
insignificant skull fracture.
At trial, the defense argued that the minimal standard of care had
been met--that at the time of Mrs. Ross's arrival at the emergency
room, there were no findings consistent with a significant head injury,
and the most likely diagnosis was alcohol intoxication. The defense said
that Mr. Ross was
culpable Blameworthy; involving the commission of a fault or the breach of a duty imposed by law.
Culpability generally implies that an act performed is wrong but does not involve any evil intent by the wrongdoer. since he should have taken his wife back to
the emergency room within a reasonable length of time.
Mr. Ross's attorneys called two experts. The first, an
emergency room physician, testified that had Mrs. Ross merely been
demonstrating the effects of intoxication, her condition would have
improved throughout the night as her body metabolized the alcohol. He
also said that the applicable standard of care required the doctor to
conduct hourly neurological checks, which would have shown a pattern
consistent with deterioration of mental status and level of
consciousness.
The expert said a
neurosurgeon neurosurgeon
a physician who specializes in neurosurgery.
neurosurgeon A surgeon specialized in managing diseases of the brain, spine and peripheral nerves Meat & potatoes diseases Brain tumors, spinal cord disease Salary $245K + 15% bonus. , not a neurologist, should have been
called within the first few hours to examine Mrs. Ross and determine
whether her condition was due to a significant head injury or alcohol
intoxication or both. A neurosurgeon would have probably determined that
her unimproved level of consciousness and lack of responsiveness were
due to both conditions. The expert also said that Mr. Ross could not
have been expected to recognize a serious neurological emergency,
particularly when it had been missed by the defendants.
The second expert, a neurosurgeon, testified that the head injury
caused
edema edema (ĭdē`mə), abnormal accumulation of fluid in the body tissues or in the body cavities causing swelling or distention of the affected parts. , or swelling of the brain, and together with the collection
of blood in the subdural space produced a deterioration in Mrs.
Ross's level of consciousness and neurological status. The failure
of the emergency room physician and the neurologist to properly examine
her to find the cause of her lethargy, combativeness, and unconscious
state allowed blood to accumulate, which ultimately caused brain
compression and herniation, the proximate cause of her death.
The expert faulted the emergency room personnel for not recognizing
that a simple case of alcohol intoxication would have resulted in an
improvement, not a deterioration, of mental status and consciousness. He
faulted the neurologist for failing to see Mrs. Ross and for failing to
suggest that a CT scan be ordered for detection of intracranial
hemorrhage.
The jurors deliberated for four hours, during which they asked that
testimony related to Mrs. Ross's condition at admission and
discharge be read back. They rendered a verdict on behalf of the
plaintiff.
Case Number 2: Ischemic compression
Timmy Trent is blind and deaf following admission to the hospital
as a toddler for treatment of
hydrocephalus hydrocephalus (hī'drəsĕf`ələs), also known as water on the brain, developmental (congenital) or acquired condition in which there is an abnormal accumulation of body fluids within the skull. ,
increased intracranial
pressure increased intracranial pressure Intracranial hypertension, see there due to a dysfunction within the cerebral spinal fluid pathways.
A shunt was placed in the ventricular system of his brain. But the
procedure was done too late to reverse the effects of prolonged,
increased intracranial pressure.
From the day Timmy was born, his health was monitored by Dr. Welch,
an old-time pediatrician. Ms. Trent faithfully brought Timmy for his
well-baby checkups. He seemed to be growing and developing normally
except that when Timmy was about eight months old, Ms. Trent thought his
head was unusually large. She told Dr. Welch that it was difficult to
get a baseball cap to fit him and that she could barely pull a polo
shirt over his head.
Dr. Welch laughed and told Ms. Trent that a baby's body grows
at different rates. He reassured her that all was well.
By the time Timmy was a year old, he was vomiting frequently, and
Ms. Trent thought he had become somewhat irritable. At 13 months, he did
not seem as responsive to toys as he had in the past. Ms.Trent told Dr.
Welch that bright-colored toys did not elicit a response and that Timmy
did not seem to notice objects around him. Once again, Dr. Welch assured
her that her son's development was as expected and consistent with
children his age.
One morning, Ms. Trent noticed that Timmy's eyes looked
strange. The whites were visible above his irises. She called Dr.
Welch's office, but he was out sick. She was told to take Timmy to
Dr. Burnes, the covering pediatrician. Dr. Burnes took one look at Timmy
and was visibly concerned. He measured his head with a tape measure,
something Ms. Trent had seen Dr. Welch do only once or twice.
Dr. Burnes told Ms. Trent that Timmy appeared to have hydrocephalus
with a bulging
fontanel fontanel (fŏn`tənĕl'): see skull.
fontanel
or fontanelle
One of six soft spots at the junctions (sutures) of the cranial bones in an infant's skull, covered with tough, fibrous membrane. . He said the peculiar appearance of his eyes, a
"setting sun" sign, was consistent with hydrocephalus, as was
the vomiting.
Timmy went from Dr. Burnes's office to the emergency room,
where a
pediatric pediatric /pe·di·at·ric/ (pe?de-at´rik) pertaining to the health of children.
pe·di·at·ric
adj.
Of or relating to pediatrics. neurosurgeon and a neurologist evaluated him. They
diagnosed him with hydrocephalus, and within hours he was in the
operating room, where doctors inserted a ventricular-peritoneal shunt.
The shunt would remove excess cerebral spinal fluid from the brain and
divert it into the peritoneal cavity.
After the surgery, Timmy seemed more alert and active. His head
circumference started to return to a size more typical for a child his
age. However, the neurosurgeon said that Timmy could not see and that he
might not regain his vision. The neurosurgeon said the hydrocephalus had
been present for so long that it exerted pressure on the optic nerves to
the point of an irreversible ischemic injury.
At trial, the defense argued that there was no good reason to
conclude that Timmy's vision loss was part of the constellation of
defects that led to hydrocephalus. The defense pediatric neurologist
testified that the same problem that had caused the blindness caused the
hydrocephalus. He claimed that by the time the hydrocephalus could have
been diagnosed, the irreversible injury would have already occurred.
The defense also called a pediatrician who testified that there is
no need to measure a child's head circumference during the first
year. The doctor said that up to Timmy's first birthday, the size
of his head had been normal. The doctor based his opinion not on
objective measurements but on Dr. Welch's 50 years of experience as
a pediatrician.
The Trents' case was based on negligent pediatric care. A
pediatrician and a pediatric neurologist both testified to support that
claim. The pediatrician said that the signs and symptoms of
hydrocephalus were present at least since Timmy was eight months old.
The pediatrician testified that Dr. Welch failed to take regular
measurements of Timmy's head, as was required by the prevailing
standard of care. He also said that even without those measurements, Dr.
Welch had the information he needed to diagnose hydrocephalus.
Ms. Trent had made repeated references to the abnormal size of
Timmy's head. The expert showed the jury photographs of Timmy taken
at his first birthday party, which showed an abnormal-sized head and the
classic setting-sun sign.
The pediatric neurologist testified that the longer hydrocephalus
remains untreated, the more likely the risk of permanent optic nerve
injury. The expert said that the only time blindness occurs in children
with hydrocephalus is when treatment is delayed. He testified that the
injury was a direct result of Dr. Welch's failure to timely
diagnose and refer Timmy for treatment that would have prevented lasting
injury.
The jurors deliberated for about six hours, during which they
requested the photographs of Timmy's first birthday party. The jury
rendered a verdict in favor of the Trents.
Case Number 3: Compressive ischemic injury to the spinal cord
In the summer of 1992, Judy Clark, age 18, was a counselor at Camp
Big Horn, where she taught and supervised students as they shot rifles
at clay targets. Ms. Clark was helping a camper when the gun accidently
discharged. The force of the shot caused Ms. Clark to twist and bend
backward. Within hours of the incident, her back hurt.
The camp doctor prescribed muscle relaxants and told Ms. Clark she
needed to be re-evaluated the next day. By the following morning, she
could not get out of bed. The camp doctor was summoned, and he
prescribed rest and a heating pad. Another day passed, and Ms. Clark
still did not feel right. She was also having trouble urinating.
Ms.Clark called her parents, who had her transported by ambulance to a
hospital in their home city.
At the emergency room, Ms. Clark complained of numbness in her
inner thighs and a peculiar feeling that she had to
urinate urinate /uri·nate/ (u´ri-nat) to discharge urine.
u·ri·nate
v.
To excrete urine.
urinate
to void urine. . Ms. Clark
was admitted on a Saturday morning, but it was not until the following
Monday morning that doctors ordered an
MRI 1. (application) MRI - Magnetic Resonance Imaging.
2. MRI - Measurement Requirements and Interface. of her spine, after which
they diagnosed nerve-root compression.
A neurosurgeon examined Ms. Clark and reviewed the films. He sent
her to the operating room immediately, where the affected disk was
removed. After surgery, the neurosurgeon reported that the pressure on
the nerve roots had been relieved.
Ms. Clark soon recovered from the anesthesia but reported no change
in the way she felt. Over the next several months, she still had
numbness in her thighs and rectal and vaginal areas and an inability to
urinate or have a bowel movement. She had to learn how to
catheterize cath·e·ter·ize
v.
To introduce a catheter into.
cath
e·ter·i·za her bladder and was placed on a regimen of
laxatives Laxatives Definition
Laxatives are products that promote bowel movements.
Purpose
Laxatives are used to treat constipation—the passage of small amounts of hard, dry stools, usually fewer than three times a week. and stool
softeners.
At trial, the defense called a neurosurgeon, who testified that by
the time Ms. Clark had arrived at the hospital the window of opportunity
had passed and the timing of the surgery was no longer an issue. The
defense argued that the camp doctor was responsible for Ms. Clark's
injuries.
Ms. Clark's attorneys called a neurosurgeon, who testified
that the window of opportunity extended past the transport to the
hospital, as evidenced by Ms. Clark's progressive loss of
neurological function, including bladder and bowel function, up to the
hours before surgery. The expert said her condition was an emergency
when her bladder and bowel function were compromised. He said the camp
doctor's failure to recognize an emergency and the hospital's
failure to have a neurosurgical consultant perform emergency
decompressive surgery were proximate causes of her loss of bladder and
bowel control.
The expert also testified that there was no medical reason for the
hospital not to have obtained the diagnostic studies or call a
neurosurgeon immediately to perform the surgery. By delaying, the expert
said, the hospital's window of opportunity to prevent permanent
injury was lost.
The neurosurgeon also said the bladder and bowel injury was
foreseeable and that the outcome could have been avoided with earlier
diagnosis and treatment.
The jurors deliberated about 12 hours. They concluded that both the
camp doctor and the hospital were negligent and
apportioned ap·por·tion
tr.v. ap·por·tioned, ap·por·tion·ing, ap·por·tions
To divide and assign according to a plan; allot: "The tendency persists to apportion blame as suits the circumstances" liability
between them.
Practical tips
These example cases are by no means all-inclusive but are intended
to illustrate the issues that are central to neurological and
neurosurgical cases. The following tips may help in selecting
meritorious cases and handling them successfully.
* Be clear as to the nature of the injury.
* Understand the pathological mechanism that caused the injury.
* Be certain that the injury was foreseeable and avoidable.
* Be convinced that any other cause for the injury can be logically
ruled out.
* Consult experts who will render honest, but not necessarily
favorable, opinions.
Litigating these cases can be satisfying. Clients can be
compensated for others' negligence, and attorneys can feel
gratified grat·i·fy
tr.v. grat·i·fied, grat·i·fy·ing, grat·i·fies
1. To please or satisfy: His achievement gratified his father. See Synonyms at please.
2. for having taken a complex medical scenario and clearly
explaining it to jurors.
Medical negligence documents from the
ATLA ATLA Association of Trial Lawyers of America
ATLA American Theological Library Association
ATLA American Trial Lawyers Association
ATLA Air Transport Licensing Authority (Hong Kong)
ATLA Avatar: The Last Airbender Exchange
The documents listed below and many others on topics pertaining to
medical negligence
litigation An action brought in court to enforce a particular right. The act or process of bringing a lawsuit in and of itself; a judicial contest; any dispute.
When a person begins a civil lawsuit, the person enters into a process called litigation. are available from the ATLA Exchange. For
more information, visit the Exchange Web site at
http://exchange.atla.org, or contact the Exchange by phone at (800)
344-3023 or by fax at (202) 337-0977.
Emergency rooms
American National Bank v. Lutheran General Hospital. Deposition of
the defendant's emergency medicine expert in a case alleging
failure to diagnose failure to diagnose,
n a failure to assess a patient's condition. Harm may be inflicted by the failure to administer treatment to a potentially treatable condition. aortic dissection. (No. PN-466.)
Arline v. St. Elizabeth Hospital. Deposition of a medical expert
and the parties' primary
interrogatories Written questions submitted to a party from his or her adversary to ascertain answers that are prepared in writing and signed under oath and that have relevance to the issues in a lawsuit. , objections, and answers
in a case alleging failure to administer a tetanus shot. (No. PN-376.)
DeMario v.
St. Francis Medical Center St. Francis Medical Center may refer to: - St. Francis Medical Center — Lynwood, California
- OSF St. Francis Medical Center — Peoria, Illinois
- St. Francis Regional Medical Center — Shakopee, Minnesota
- St.
. The plaintiff's
complaint and motion for application of state law and the final
pretrial pre·tri·al
n.
A proceeding held before an official trial, especially to clarify points of law and facts.
adj.
1. Of or relating to a pretrial.
2. order in a case in which the plaintiff alleged an emergency room
physician had failed to diagnose a bowel obstruction. (No. PN-3210.)
Kaberline v. Martha Washington Hospital. The plaintiff's
complaint alleging an internist negligently failed to diagnose his
cervical fracture and to remove his cervical collar before his spine was
stabilized. (No. PN-215.)
Manship v. Coastal Emergency Services. The plaintiff's
memoranda in opposition to the defendants' summary judgment motions
in a case alleging failure to properly treat an infection. (No. PN-480.)
Emergency Medical Treatment and Active Labor Act The Emergency Medical Treatment and Active Labor Act (, EMTALA) is a United States Act of Congress passed in 1986 as part of the Consolidated Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act. (
EMTALA EMTALA Emergency Medical Treatment & Active Labor Act, see there )
Hewett v. Inland Hospital. The plaintiff's response to the
defendants' motion to stay and incorporated memorandum of law and
the defendants' supplemental memorandum regarding jurisdiction and
the plaintiff's objections in a case holding state notice and
prelitigation screening requirements for medical negligence claims are
inapplicable to an EMTALA claim. (No. PN-617.)
Lopez-Soto v. Hawayek. The plaintiffs' appellate briefs in a
case holding that EMTALA's screening and stabilization requirements
should be read separately. (No. PN-622.)
Paz de Castellanos v. Sociedad Espanola de Auxilio Mutuo y
Beneficencia de Puerto Rico. The plaintiff's complaint and revised
joint pretrial memorandum in a case alleging a hospital and several
doctors had failed to properly examine, stabilize, or treat a pregnant
woman in labor before transferring her to a different facility. (No.
PN-624.)
Roberts v. Galen of Virginia, Inc. The parties' U.S. Supreme
Court briefs and an
amicus curiae brief Noun 1. amicus curiae brief - a brief presented by someone interested in influencing the outcome of a lawsuit but who is not a party to it
brief, legal brief - a document stating the facts and points of law of a client's case supporting the defendant in a
case holding it is unnecessary for a plaintiff to show a hospital's
improper motive to prove liability under EMTALA. (No. PN-603.)
Steele v. Anson County Hospital. The plaintiffs' memorandum
supporting partial summary judgment in a case alleging improper patient
"dumping" under EMTALA. (No. PN410.)
Employee Retirement Income Security Act The Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA), 29 U.S.C.A. § 1001 et seq. (1974), is a federal law that sets minimum standards for most voluntarily established Pension and health plans in private industry to provide protection for individuals enrolled in these plans. (
ERISA See Employee Retirement Income Security Act.
ERISA
See Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA). )
Dukes v. U.S. Healthcare, Inc. Appellate briefs of the plaintiffs
and
amicus curiae amicus curiae
(Latin: “friend of the court”) One who assists a court by furnishing information or advice regarding questions of law or fact. A person (or other entity, such as a state government) who is not a party to a particular lawsuit but nevertheless has a in a case holding federal courts lacked ERISA civil
enforcement
preemption preemption
U.S. policy that allowed the first settlers, or squatters, on public land to buy the land they had improved. Since improved land, coveted by speculators, was often priced too high for squatters to buy at auction, temporary preemptive laws allowed them to acquire jurisdiction over negligence claims against a
health maintenance organization. (No. PN-477.)
Frappier v. Wishnov. The parties' appellate briefs in a case
holding ERISA does not
preempt pre·empt or pre-empt
v. pre·empt·ed, pre·empt·ing, pre·empts
v.tr.
1. To appropriate, seize, or take for oneself before others. See Synonyms at appropriate.
2.
a. a vicarious liability claim against an
HMO HMO health maintenance organization.
HMO
n.
A corporation that is financed by insurance premiums and has member physicians and professional staff who provide curative and preventive medicine within certain financial, . (No. PN-525.)
Herrera v. Lovelace Health System, Inc. The plaintiff's motion
to remand, memorandum in support of the motion, the defendants'
response, and the plaintiff's reply in a case holding that a
man's claims alleging negligent
vasectomy vasectomy, male sterilization by surgical excision of the vas deferens, the thin duct that carries sperm cells from the testicles to the prostate and the penis. against a doctor and
health main tenance organization are not completely preempted by ERISA.
(No. PN-605.)
Shannon v. McNulty. The plaintiffs' appellate brief and the
Pennsylvania Trial Lawyers Association's amicus curiae brief in a
case holding an HMO may be liable under vicarious and corporate
liability theories. (No. PN-592.)
Laparoscopy laparoscopy
or peritoneoscopy
Procedure for inspecting the abdominal cavity using a laparoscope; also surgery requiring use of a laparoscope. Laparoscopes use fibre-optic lights and small video cameras to show tissues and organs on a monitor.
Abreu v. Nunez. The plaintiffs' depositions of experts and the
defendant in a case alleging a
gynecologist gynecologist /gy·ne·col·o·gist/ (-kol´ah-jist) a person skilled in gynecology.
gy·ne·col·o·gist
n.
A physician specializing in gynecology. negligently performed a
laparoscopy, resulting in a thermal burn of a woman's left
ureter ureter (y
rē`tər), thick-walled tube that conveys urine from the kidney to the urinary bladder. It is approximately 10 in. (25. .
(No. PN-411.)
Cataldi v. Wilson. Deposition of the plaintiffs' general
surgery expert in a case alleging negligent laparoscopic
cholecystectomy. (No. PN-512.)
Obstetrics
Brown v.
HCA HCA,
n.pr See acid, hydroxycitric. Highland Hospital Services. The plaintiffs'
supplemental petition on breach of contract, damages, attorney fees,
medical negligence, and loss of consortium in a case alleging hospital
liability for failure to monitor fetal distress. (No. PN-462.)
Hull v.
Cohen cohen
or kohen
(Hebrew: “priest”) Jewish priest descended from Zadok (a descendant of Aaron), priest at the First Temple of Jerusalem. The biblical priesthood was hereditary and male. . The defendant's deposition in a case alleging
use of excessive force in a delivery. (No. PN-379.)
Marlin v. Murdoch. The plaintiffs' trial brief in a case
alleging negligent delivery of an infant when shoulder dystocia was
encountered. (No. PN-414.)
Pisco Pisco (pēs`kō), city (1993 pop. 53,714), capital of Pisco prov., SW Peru, a port on the Pacific Ocean. The major industries are the production of the famous Pisco brandy, the cultivation and processing of cotton, and commercial fishing. v. Maternity Infant Care Family Planning Project. The
plaintiff's obstetrical expert's trial testimony in a case
alleging the defendant had negligently failed to rule out placenta
previa or timely administer tocolytic drugs. (No. PN-458.)
Wingo v. Rockford Memorial Hospital. Depositions of the
plaintiffs' obstetrics expert and the defendants' nursing
expert in a case in which the plaintiffs alleged improper discharge of a
pregnant woman with ruptured membranes. (No. PN-538.)
Brain injuries
Neurological and neurosurgical cases involve intracranial processes
that adversely affect the brain or spinal cord.
Harvey F. Wachsman, a doctor and an attorney, practices law in
Great Neck, New York Great Neck is a village in Nassau County, New York, in the U.S., on the North Shore of Long Island. As of the United States 2000 Census, the village population was 9,538.
The Village of Great Neck is in the Town of North Hempstead. . Carole L. Gutterman, a registered nurse, consults
with medical malpractice law firms.