Atkins v. Louisiana Mutual Medical Insurance Co.

105 So. 3d 781, 2012 La. App. LEXIS 1368, 2012 WL 5415521
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 7, 2012
DocketNo. 47,374-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 105 So. 3d 781 (Atkins v. Louisiana Mutual Medical Insurance Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Atkins v. Louisiana Mutual Medical Insurance Co., 105 So. 3d 781, 2012 La. App. LEXIS 1368, 2012 WL 5415521 (La. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

CARAWAY, J.

|! This is a medical malpractice action against an emergency room physician who treated the decedent for chest pain. Nine hours after his emergency room treatment began in Jonesboro, the decedent died in a Monroe hospital of a heart attack. The plaintiffs appeal the trial court’s judgments denying new trial and judgment notwithstanding the verdict which were filed after a jury determination that the physician’s treatment did not fall below the standard of care. For the following reasons, we affirm.

Facts

On the afternoon of March 7, 2006, Glen Atkins suffered a sudden onset of chest pain while working at his hair salon near his home in Hodge, Louisiana. Atkins was described by a fellow employee as pale, sweaty and clammy. After 30 minutes, Atkins was taken to the Jackson Parish Emergency Room (“JPER”). Atkins reported his medical history upon arrival at the hospital to emergency room nurses and defendant, Dr. Dirk Rainwater, the emergency room physician. Atkins reported suffering with acid reflux two or three nights a week in previous months [784]*784which he indicated produced excruciating pain lasting approximately 30 minutes. He had a history of hypertension and obesity. He led a sedentary lifestyle and was a smoker with a family history of heart disease. Atkins reported that he had a negative nuclear stress test1 for his heart approximately six months | ?prior. He had sustained a fast heartbeat in years past which was corrected with an ablation and heart catheterization.

Significantly, the day before this incident, Atkins had undergone upper and lower gastrointestinal (“GI”) testing. The possibility of a biopsy during such testing was therefore present; however it was not made clear that such biopsy had in fact occurred. Atkins reported that testing to emergency room personnel.

Atkins’ arrival at JPER was at 3:10 p.m. This dispute concerns the medical malpractice of Dr. Rainwater which allegedly resulted from the treatment received at JPER. Atkins left Jonesboro by ambulance at 8:45 p.m. for transfer to St. Francis Medical Center in Monroe. A cardiologist, Dr. Asad Mouhaffel, agreed to receive Atkins as a patient in Monroe, and following Atkins’ arrival at St. Francis at 9:40 p.m., he died of an acute myocardial infarction at midnight.

Rainwater’s actions in interpreting Atkins’ electrocardiogram (“EKG”) data and other testing and his communication with Dr. Mouhaffel are the focus of this dispute. The expert testimony explained that an EKG has 12 leads including six limb leads made up of Lead I, Lead II, Lead III, AVR, AVL, AVF and six chest leads including VI, V2, V3, V4, V5 and V6, which show the electrical impulses of the heart on paper. Regarding the EKG taken at JPER at 3:20 p.m., some of the trial experts indicated Atkins’ ST wave elevations in Leads VI and V2, or contiguous leads, indicated that Atkins was suffering from what is called an ST segment myocardial infarction, MI or heart attack, also known as and referred to herein as a |sSTEMI. With a STEMI, described by experts as the most serious type of heart attack, the entire thickness of the affected heart muscle has its blood supply completely cut off, causing death to the muscle. The standard of care for a STEMI is to open the clogged artery as soon as possible which in this case would require Atkins’ transfer to the care of a cardiologist in Monroe.

Considering Atkins’ medical history, however, other experts testified that the elevated ST waves were also indicative of a past heart attack or cardiac ischemia, clouding the diagnosis of a presently occurring heart attack. They point to the presence of Q waves on the EKG in support of that possibility. The experts could agree that the accepted definition of a STEMI was an EKG that showed ST elevations of two millimeters or more in contiguous leads. All also agreed that Atkins’ EKG showed ST elevation of two millimeters or more in the VI and V2 leads. It was established that Rainwater failed to specifically communicate this information of the elevations to Dr. Mouhaffel before transporting Atkins to Monroe later that evening.

Additionally, Atkins’ increasing Tropo-nin levels shown from two heart enzyme blood tests at JPER were reviewed. Testimony indicated that Troponin is a protein found in the heart muscle cell which is released into the blood stream when disruption of the heart muscle cell occurs. It is a cardiac enzyme which is measured by blood analysis. When Troponin levels are above zero, muscle death has occurred. [785]*785Atkins’ initial .23 was a low but not normal finding, and this level increased to .78 after a second |4blood test, prompting Dr. Rainwater’s transfer of the patient to Monroe. In Monroe, by 11:20 p.m., Atkins’ Troponin level had increased to 1.46.

The record indicates that Atkins was given aspirin and a GI cocktail at 3:49 p.m. Nitroglycerin and morphine were also ordered to be given as needed for any further pain. Only the aspirin and GI cocktail were actually given to Aktins. A point of controversy was the issue of whether Dr. Rainwater, upon learning of the elevated Troponin, should have administered to Atkins clot buster medication and/or beta blockers which relax the heart. Dr. Rainwater did not give either treatment due to Atkins’ history of the recent GI testing and the contraindication of a possible biopsy from the colonoscopy which could cause bleeding and his lack of chest pain which subsided soon after arrival at JPER.

Suzanne, Brian and James Atkins (hereinafter “plaintiffs”), the widow and two sons of Atkins, submitted claims against Dr. Rainwater, Jackson Parish Hospital, Dr. Mouhaffel and St. Francis Medical Center to a medical review panel. On July 23, 2008, a divided panel issued the following opinion regarding Dr. Rainwater which was introduced into evidence and referenced through each physician’s testimony at trial.2 The stated the claims against Dr. Rainwater were listed by the panel as follows:

1. Failure to properly read and interpret 12 lead EKG by failing to recognize ST elevations, resulting in delay of diagnosis and delay and treatment;
2. Failure to advise Dr. Mouhaffel that Mr. Atkins was having an ST elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI);
3.Failure to treat in an appropriate and timely matter resulting in his death;
|s4. Failure to consider emergency tPa treatment and treat with beta blocker, Plavix, nitroglycerin and blood thinners (Lovenox);
5. Failure to transfer for revasculari-zation.

The Majority and Dissent. Opinions read as follows regarding Dr. Rainwater:

MAJORITY OPINION (Drs. Chinnier (sic) and Bahro): The patient, Mr Glen Atkins, did not have clinical picture of acute myocardial infarction. The patient did have a history of colonoscopy the day before and recent normal stress test. The emergency department did not have a comparable prior EKG. Based upon the patient’s complaints and physical examination, Dr. Rainwater ordered lab work and EKG. Based upon the results of the EKG, Dr. Rainwater read the EKG with some elevated and ST and Q waves present which could have indicated recent myocardial infarction or old infarction with aneurysm. Dr. Rainwater ordered Mr. Atkins be treated with aspirin, nitroglycerin and a GI cocktail. The chest pain subsided. The initial Troponin was low .23. Dr. Rainwater was obviously concerned about heart disease.

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Bluebook (online)
105 So. 3d 781, 2012 La. App. LEXIS 1368, 2012 WL 5415521, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/atkins-v-louisiana-mutual-medical-insurance-co-lactapp-2012.