Andrew Rodriguez v. Stryker Corporation

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedMay 21, 2012
Docket11-5335
StatusPublished

This text of Andrew Rodriguez v. Stryker Corporation (Andrew Rodriguez v. Stryker Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Andrew Rodriguez v. Stryker Corporation, (6th Cir. 2012).

Opinion

RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION Pursuant to Sixth Circuit Rule 206 File Name: 12a0145p.06

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT _________________

X - ANDREW RODRIGUEZ, - Plaintiff-Appellant, - - No. 11-5335 v. , > - Corporation; STRYKER SALES CORPORATION, - STRYKER CORPORATION, a Michigan - - a Michigan Corporation, Defendants-Appellees. - N Appeal from the United States District Court for the Middle District of Tennessee at Cookeville. No. 2:08-cv-124—Aleta Arthur Trauger, District Judge. Argued: April 18, 2012 Decided and Filed: May 21, 2012 Before: GIBBONS and SUTTON, Circuit Judges; DUGGAN, District Judge.*

_________________

COUNSEL ARGUED: James T. Blanch, PARSONS BEHLE & LATIMER, Salt Lake City, Utah, for Appellant. Hall R. Marston, SEDGWICK, Los Angeles, California, for Appellees. ON BRIEF: James T. Blanch, Richard E. Mrazik, Alan S. Mouritsen, PARSONS BEHLE & LATIMER, Salt Lake City, Utah, for Appellant. Robert M. Connolly, STITES & HARBISON, Louisville, Kentucky, for Appellees.

* The Honorable Patrick J. Duggan, United States District Judge for the Eastern District of Michigan, sitting by designation.

1 No. 11-5335 Rodriguez v. Stryker Corp. et al. Page 2

OPINION _________________

SUTTON, Circuit Judge. Stryker Corporation and its sales affiliate, Stryker Sales Corporation (together, “Stryker”), make and sell a pain pump, which a doctor prescribed for Andrew Rodriguez after his shoulder surgery. When the pump allegedly damaged the cartilage in Rodriguez’s shoulder, he sued the companies, seeking recovery for the injury. The district court granted summary judgment to Stryker. We affirm.

I.

In November 2004, Rodriguez had arthroscopic surgery to treat pain and instability in his shoulder joint. Dr. John Kuhn performed the operation, and at the end of the procedure he implanted a pain-pump catheter in Rodriguez’s shoulder. Over the next two days, a Stryker pain pump delivered a regular dose of a local anesthetic, bupivicaine, to the shoulder joint. Rodriguez’s condition improved after surgery but worsened over time, and in 2008 he learned he no longer had any cartilage remaining in his shoulder, a condition called chondrolysis.

Rodriguez sued Stryker in 2008, alleging strict liability, negligence and breach of warranty. Stryker moved for summary judgment and to exclude or limit the testimony of Rodriguez’s experts on Daubert grounds. Even accepting the admissibility of the expert testimony for the sake of argument, the district court concluded that Stryker could not reasonably have known about the risk of chondrolysis in 2004 and thus had no duty to warn of the risk. The court also held that Rodriguez failed as a matter of law to prove causation.

II.

Under Tennessee law, a manufacturer must warn users about non-obvious dangers caused by its product. Pittman v. Upjohn Co., 890 S.W.2d 425, 428–29 (Tenn. 1994); Evridge v. Am. Honda Motor Co., 685 S.W.2d 632, 636 (Tenn. 1985). The duty No. 11-5335 Rodriguez v. Stryker Corp. et al. Page 3

to warn extends to known dangers or dangers that a manufacturer “could [have] discover[ed] through the exercise of reasonable care.” Allen v. Upjohn Co., No. 833, 1981 WL 649508, at *4 (Tenn. Ct. App. Dec. 30, 1981).

Rodriguez does not claim that Stryker knew its pumps could cause chondrolysis. That would not be possible. Even though doctors, including Rodriguez’s doctors, had been using pain pumps to provide anesthetics to post-operative joints for years, no reported case of chondrolysis linked to anesthetics appears until 2005—after Rodriguez’s November 2004 surgery. Rodriguez claims instead that Stryker should have known about the risk. But “the state of scientific and technological knowledge available to the manufacturer . . . at the time the product was placed on the market,” Tenn. Code Ann. § 29-28-105(b), see Allen, 1981 WL 649508, at *5, defeats this claim as a matter of law.

The articles. Rodriguez submits thirteen articles published at various times during the seventy years before the surgery, which allegedly put Stryker on notice about the danger of using its pain pumps inside a joint. Yet none of the articles draws a connection between pain pumps and chondrolysis, leaving Rodriguez to argue something more inferential: that the studies “document[ ] significant damage to articular cartilage after prolonged exposure to foreign solutions, including bupivicaine.” Rodriguez Br. at 32. Even that is a stretch, however, given what the articles say.

A 1933 article shows that injecting rabbit joints with various water and saline solutions produces chronic arthritis. J. Albert Key, The Production of Chronic Arthritis by the Injection of Weak Acids, Alkalies, Distilled Water, and Salt Solution in Joints, 15 J. Bone & Joint Surgery 67, 84 (1933). The injections in this study, however, took place over a period of weeks, far longer than the two-day pain pump used here, not to mention that the study did not use bupicivaine (or for that matter humans). Id. at 67–68.

Three other articles compare solutions typically used in arthroscopic surgery and recommend the best solution for cartilage. Brian F. Reagan et al., Irrigating Solutions for Arthroscopy, 65 J. Bone & Joint Surgery 629–31 (1983); S.K. Bulstra et al., The Effect In Vitro of Irrigating Solutions on Intact Rat Articular Cartilage, 76 J. Bone & No. 11-5335 Rodriguez v. Stryker Corp. et al. Page 4

Joint Surgery 468–70 (1994); J.S. Jurvelin et al., Effects of Different Irrigation Liquids and Times on Articular Cartilage, 10 Arthroscopy 667–72 (1994). But they do not warn against using solutions in the joint space; they recommend only which solution should be used.

Four other articles address the risk of chondrolysis. But they tie the risk to gentian violet (a dye) and chlorhexidine (an antiseptic), not bupivicaine (an anesthetic). Kazuya Tamai et al., Chondrolysis of the Shoulder Following a “Color Test”-Assisted Rotator Cuff Repair—A Report of 2 Cases, 68 Acta Orthopaedica Scandinavica 401–02 (1997); Y. Shibata et al., Chondrolysis of the Glenohumeral Joint Following a Color Test Using Gentian Violet, 25 International Orthopaedics 401–03 (2001); C.M. Douw et al., Clinical and Pathological Changes in the Knee After Accidental Chlorhexidine Irrigation During Arthroscopy, 80 J. Bone & Joint Surgery 437–40 (1997); A.L. van Huyssteen & D.J. Bracey, Chlorhexidine and Chondrolysis in the Knee, 81 J. Bone & Joint Surgery 995–96 (1999).

Three other articles address the use of bupivicaine within a joint. But they fail to say that such use is unsafe. John P. Fulkerson & Thomas F. Winters, Jr., Articular Cartilage Response to Arthroscopic Surgery, 2 Arthroscopy 184, 186 (1986) (bupivicaine can inhibit cartilage but “it appears that this effect on cartilage is transient”); John W. Jaureguito et al., The Effects of Morphine on Human Articular Cartilage of the Knee, 18 Arthroscopy 631, 635 (2002) (combination of morphine and bupivicaine “does not have a deleterious effect on human articular cartilage”); Roberta Nole et al., Bupivicaine and Saline Effects on Articular Cartilage, 1 Arthroscopy 123, 126 (1985) (“[b]upivicaine itself seems to be fairly well tolerated by articular cartilage”).

Another article describes a patient who developed chondrolysis and says the patient used a pain pump with bupivicaine after surgery. Damon H. Petty, Glenohumeral Chondrolysis After Shoulder Arthroscopy, 32 Am. J. Sports Med. 509, 511 (2004).

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Andrew Rodriguez v. Stryker Corporation, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/andrew-rodriguez-v-stryker-corporation-ca6-2012.