Artie Len Reinert, et ux v. Allen C. Heller, M.D., et ux

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedSeptember 14, 2021
Docket37081-0
StatusUnpublished

This text of Artie Len Reinert, et ux v. Allen C. Heller, M.D., et ux (Artie Len Reinert, et ux v. Allen C. Heller, M.D., et ux) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Artie Len Reinert, et ux v. Allen C. Heller, M.D., et ux, (Wash. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

FILED SEPTEMBER 14, 2021 In the Office of the Clerk of Court WA State Court of Appeals Division III

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON DIVISION THREE

ARTIE LEN REINERT, JR AND ) CONSUELA LEE REINERT, ) No. 37081-0-III ) Appellant, ) ) v. ) ) ALLEN C. HELLER, M.D. and ) STEPHANIE A. HELLER, husband and ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION wife, and the martial community ) composed thereof; ROCKWOOD ) CLINIC, P.S.; ROCKWOOD ) NEUROSURGERY AND SPINE ) CENTER; DEACONESS HOSPITAL; ) and SPOKANE WASHINGTON ) HOSPITAL COMPANY, LLC, and ) DOES 1-10, ) ) Respondents. )

FEARING, J. — Neurosurgeon Allen Heller performed a discectomy on Artie

Reinert’s C5-6 cervical spine level when Reinert and Heller intended for Dr. Heller to

perform the procedure at the C6-7 level. After discovering the mistake, Dr. Heller

returned Reinert to the operating room two days later and performed the surgery at the No. 37081-0-III Reinert v. Heller MD

C6-7 level. Plaintiff Artie Reinert appeals from an adverse verdict in a medical

malpractice lawsuit against Allen Heller. Reinert assigns error to numerous evidentiary

rulings of the trial court. Because the trial court did not abuse its discretion in any of its

rulings, we affirm the judgment entered in favor of defendant Dr. Heller.

FACTS

Artie and Consuela Reinert sued Allen Heller, M.D., and Dr. Heller’s employer,

Rockwood Clinic, for an alleged breach of a physician’s standard of care during an

anterior cervical discectomy fusion (ACDF) that Heller performed on Artie Reinert in

October 2012. We refer to the plaintiffs collectively as Artie Reinert, and we refer to the

defendants collectively as Dr. Allen Heller or Heller. A discectomy removes the

damaged portion of a herniated disc in the spine. The anterior nature of Artie Reinert’s

surgery looms important in this dispute. The patient lies prone on his back. For an

anterior cervical discectomy, the surgeon performs an incision through the throat, rather

than through the back of the neck.

Artie Reinert suffered a disc herniation at level C6-7 of his cervical spine. A

herniation occurs when the soft, central portion of the intervertebral disc bulges beyond

the torn, hard outer ring of the disc. Reinert’s herniated disc pressed on a nearby nerve.

Reinert also experienced a disc bulge and bone spur at the C5-6 disc level.

2 No. 37081-0-III Reinert v. Heller MD

Artie Reinert consulted with Dr. Allen Heller, a neurological surgeon, and, during

initial conversations, the two discussed surgery at the C6-7 level and the C5-6 level of the

spine. The physician and patient decided, however, to treat only level C6-7. Dr. Heller

advised that surgery on the C6-7 level presented an urgent medical necessity due to the

resulting compression on a spinal cord nerve. The large disc herniation at C6-7, if left

untreated, would worsen and possibly result in paralysis. Dr. Heller did not then consider

surgery on level C5-6 a medical necessity. Heller scheduled an ACDF, a common

procedure, at the C6-7 level.

When performing a discectomy, the surgeon must locate the targeted disc. The

cervical spine consists of seven vertebrae. Most of these vertebrae consist of square

blocks stacked on one another. The first cervical vertebrae, the C1, bears the unique

shape of a ring sitting on top of the C2 vertebrae. C2 also has a unique appearance. The

C2 vertebrae is a square block but with a thumb-like appendage. When locating a lower

level of the cervical spine during a discectomy, surgeons will often first locate levels C1

and C2, due to their unique structures, and then count down to the level sought. The C6-

7 level is located toward the bottom of the cervical spine.

3 No. 37081-0-III Reinert v. Heller MD

Neurosurgeons also employ a portable x-ray machine called a C-arm fluoroscopy

machine (C-Arm) to locate the ruptured disc for a discectomy. Fluoroscopy shows a

continuous X-ray image on a monitor, much like an X-ray movie. A radiology technician

takes images of the cervical spine for review by the surgeon. The C-Arm rotates in an arc

in order to x-ray the spine from various angles.

C-Arm fluoroscopy machine

On October 2, 2012, Dr. Allen Heller proceeded with an ACDF on Artie Reinert’s

C6-7 level. Dr. Heller positioned Reinert on his back on the operating table. He

extended Reinert’s neck so that his chin pointed toward the ceiling. Heller then

endeavored to locate the targeted level.

During Artie Reinert’s surgery, Dr. Allen Heller used the C-Arm to obtain a lateral

fluoroscope view. To obtain that view, the radiology technician positions the C-Arm to

shoot beams from left to right. A lateral x-ray permits a surgeon to view isolated levels

of the vertebrae and disc space. According to Dr. Heller, on October 2, he also sought a

4 No. 37081-0-III Reinert v. Heller MD

different view, called an anterior posterior (AP) view, or straight up and down view. He

did not save images from this view, however. The AP view often provides unreliable and

distorted images causing difficulty in distinguishing various vertebral bodies. During

trial, Dr. Heller opined that a lateral fluoroscopic image with the use of a metallic marker

affords the most reliable view for locating a disc level.

The position of the patient’s shoulders can complicate locating level C6-7 with use

of the C-Arm fluoroscopy machine. The patient may raise his shoulders or one shoulder

may be higher than the other, both of which occurrences cause a darkened area on the x-

ray, preventing a physician from clearly identifying the various spinal discs.

During Artie Reinert’s ACDF, Reinert’s shoulders rode high. Dr. Allen Heller

employed different techniques in order to find, with the C-Arm, the lower levels of

Reinert’s spine. Dr. Heller first taped, with robust cloth tape, Reinert’s shoulders to the

operating table. Despite the taping, the x-ray showed the cervical spine only to the C3-4

level. Below this level, the image appeared black. Dr. Heller then shot still images at

various angles and different planes with the C-Arm machine. The still images did not

lead to a clearer view of the lower cervical spine. Heller next attempted to trick the C-

Arm. He taped bags of saline fluid to the side of Reinert’s neck in order to equal the

density of the shoulders. This technique did not improve the image of Reinert’s lower

cervical spine.

5 No. 37081-0-III Reinert v. Heller MD

Dr. Allen Heller tried a fourth technique by placing a metallic object on Artie

Reinert’s throat where he estimated he would cut his incision for level C6-7. Dr. Heller

incised the spot and dissected down to the spinal column. He inserted a spinal needle

into the immediate disc. He did not know the level at which he placed the needle because

the C-Arm revealed only blackness. Heller then began internal counting. He took a

“peanut,” a blunt-tipped long metallic clamp and ran the peanut up the spinal column as

far as he could. Another C-arm still shot revealed that the tip of the peanut sat at level

C3-4. Heller then palpated down the front of the spine and counted the cervical vertebrae

to the spot he concluded was level C6-7.

A normal healthy spine, without degenerative wear-and-tear, yields predictable

contour when the neurosurgeon counts cervical spine levels. The bones feel like valleys

and the intervertebral discs feel like peaks. When Dr.

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Artie Len Reinert, et ux v. Allen C. Heller, M.D., et ux, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/artie-len-reinert-et-ux-v-allen-c-heller-md-et-ux-washctapp-2021.