Angelakis v. Teimourian

822 A.2d 494, 150 Md. App. 507, 2003 Md. App. LEXIS 49
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMay 1, 2003
Docket57, Sept. Term, 2002
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 822 A.2d 494 (Angelakis v. Teimourian) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Angelakis v. Teimourian, 822 A.2d 494, 150 Md. App. 507, 2003 Md. App. LEXIS 49 (Md. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

KRAUSER, J.

Appellant, Alexandra Angelakis, and her husband, Dimitrios Angelakis, brought a medical malpractice action against appellees, Bahman Teimourian, M.D., and Suburban Hospital, Inc. The Angelakises claimed that the “ultrasound-assisted liposuction” performed by Dr. Teimourian on Mrs. Angelakis’s abdomen and thighs at Suburban Hospital had left her scarred and disfigured, as a result of appellees’ negligence. A Montgomery County jury disagreed. Finding neither the negligence nor the lack of informed consent alleged by the Angelakises, the jury returned a verdict in favor of appellees.

Mrs. Angelakis then noted this appeal, 1 contending that the circuit court erred in excluding, as a subsequent remedial measure, a post-operative letter written by Dr. Teimourian to a peer review journal. In that letter, which included a photograph of appellant’s thighs and abdomen, Teimourian warned of the risks involved in performing ultrasound-assisted liposuction too aggressively on the inner thighs and abdomen. The letter, appellant claims, should not have been excluded by the circuit court as a remedial measure but admitted as either an admission or as impeachment evidence.

The circuit court’s ruling, however, was a little more nuanced than that. In what appears to have been a carefully *511 calculated attempt to balance competing interests of public policy and private need, the court excluded the letter itself, as appellant contends, but permitted her to introduce the photograph, published with the letter, of her post-operative abdomen and thighs and to use the letter, without referring specifically to it, to cross-examine Dr. Teimourian.

The court’s decision to exclude the letter, as a subsequent remedial measure, was initially correct. But, as the trial progressed, the propriety of that exclusion evaporated: Once Dr. Teimourian gave testimony that flatly contradicted material representations that he made in the letter, the letter was admissible as impeachment evidence. The court’s failure, at that point, to permit what it had prohibited was error. But it was harmless error, since the substance of the letter was made known to the jury through Dr. Teimourian’s testimony, and the photograph, which accompanied it, was introduced into evidence. That made the admission of the missive de minimis.

The Surgery

In November 1996, appellant was informed by her gynecologist, Dr. Edward Cunningham, that she had cervical cancer. To remove the cancer, she underwent a procedure called “conization” — so named because it involves the excision of a cone of tissue. Following that operation, Dr. Cunningham recommended that she also undergo a “radical hysterectomy” to eliminate any remaining cancer cells.

She agreed to the procedure but then asked if he would also perform, at that time, a “tummy tuck,” 2 as the incision for the hysterectomy could also be used for that purpose. As he was not a plastic surgeon, Dr. Cunningham referred her to a doctor who was — Dr. Teimourian. Appellant met with Teimourian, and he agreed to perform, after the hysterectomy, *512 liposuction on her abdomen and inner thighs, as well as plastic surgery on her face, arms, and buttocks.

On February 11,1997, after Dr. Cunningham completed the hysterectomy, Dr. Teimourian performed a series of surgical procedures on appellant, 3 which included traditional and ultrasound-assisted liposuction (“UAL”) on her abdomen and inner thighs. Traditional liposuction begins with the introduction of a blunt flexible tube, known as a “cannula,” into the fatty layer of the body through an incision. The sharp edges of the cannula’s opening are then used to sheer off fatty tissue, as the cannula is passed back and forth over the area to be reduced. Because the cannula is attached to a suction device, it draws in the loose tissue as it moves back and forth.

UAL reduces fatty tissue in a different way. Instead of cutting, it emits ultrasonic sound waves to rupture cells and, in essence, melts the fat away. Unlike traditional liposuction, it generates heat and therefore has the potential to bum whatever it comes in contact with, including skin, unless used property-

At the conclusion of the surgery, Dr. Teimourian closed the abdominal incision only to reopen it when he found the blood supply to that area was inadequate or, as he put it, “the capillary refill was not there.” He left the incision open, with the intention of closing it in stages to avoid skin loss. In the meantime, the incision was covered by sterile dressings and “some local antibiotic” was applied.

On February 15, 1997, appellant was discharged from the hospital. During subsequent appointments with Dr. Teimourian, fluid was drained, and dead or “necrotic” tissue was cut away from her groin and abdomen. On February 19, 1997, cultures were taken from the incision areas, which later showed evidence of a staph infection.

*513 On February 28, 1997, running a temperature of over 103 degrees, appellant went to see Dr. Teimourian. A few days later, she returned, complaining of pain in her upper thighs, groin, and abdomen. After observing “areas of necrosis and infection of the abdomen and the medial thighs,” Dr. Chester Haverback, an associate of Teimourian’s, admitted her to Holy Cross Hospital. There, she was diagnosed with having “postoperative infections with severe cellulitis and loss of skin and subcutaneous tissue of the abdomen and both thighs.”

The Letter

After appellant’s surgery, Dr. Teimourian submitted a letter, with a post-operative photograph of appellant’s abdomen and thighs, to a peer review journal, Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery. In that letter, he warned against using ultrasound-assisted liposuction or “UAL” as aggressively as traditional liposuction and suggested that it should not be used on the abdomen and inner thighs. The photograph of appellant that accompanied the letter showed “skin loss” presumably resulting from the misuse of UAL. 4 The letter and photograph appeared in the November 1997 issue of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery.

Teimourian’s letter began by stating:

Ultrasound-assisted liposuction has become popular in this country within the past year. This popularity has evolved, especially, as a result of the enthusiasm on the part of the manufacturers to sell expensive equipment, and, to a certain extent, because of the endorsement of our plastic surgery society. Having used ultrasound-assisted liposuction in 150 cases, I would like to convey my observations on the use of this machine.

*514 It then named the medical problems associated with an aggressive use of UAL, mentioning skin loss, among other problems:

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Bluebook (online)
822 A.2d 494, 150 Md. App. 507, 2003 Md. App. LEXIS 49, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/angelakis-v-teimourian-mdctspecapp-2003.