Collazo v. Gulmatico

2024 NY Slip Op 33096(U)
CourtNew York Supreme Court, Kings County
DecidedSeptember 4, 2024
DocketIndex No. 505790/2021
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2024 NY Slip Op 33096(U) (Collazo v. Gulmatico) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court, Kings County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Collazo v. Gulmatico, 2024 NY Slip Op 33096(U) (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2024).

Opinion

Collazo v Gulmatico 2024 NY Slip Op 33096(U) September 4, 2024 Supreme Court, Kings County Docket Number: Index No. 505790/2021 Judge: Consuelo Mallafre Melendez Cases posted with a "30000" identifier, i.e., 2013 NY Slip Op 30001(U), are republished from various New York State and local government sources, including the New York State Unified Court System's eCourts Service. This opinion is uncorrected and not selected for official publication. INDEX NO. 505790/2021 NYSCEF DOC. NO. 194 RECEIVED NYSCEF: 09/04/2024 At an IAS Term, Part 15 of the Supreme Court of the State of NY, held in and for the County of Kings, at the Courthouse, at 360 Adams Street, Brooklyn, New York, on the 4th day of September 2024.

SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK COUNTY OF KINGS --------------------------------------------------------------------------X ANDRES COLLAZO and AMELIA COLLAZO, DECISION & ORDER

Plaintiffs, Index No. 505790/2021 Mo. Seq. 3, 4 & 5 -against-

CONSTANTINO GULMATICO, M.D., WIGBERT S. GODOY, M.D., UMUT SARPEL, M.D., KUSUMA NIO, M.D., MOUNT SINAI BROOKLYN HOSPITAL and MOUNT SINAI ST. LUKES HOSPITAL,

Defendants. --------------------------------------------------------------------------X HON. CONSUELO MALLAFRE MELENDEZ, J.S.C.

Recitation, as required by CPLR §2219 [a], of the papers considered in the review:

NYSCEF #s: Seq.3: 99 – 101, 102 – 116, 117 – 118, 165, 166 – 168, 169, 182 – 183 Seq. 4: 119 – 121, 122 – 135, 170, 171 – 173, 174, 184 – 185, 186 Seq. 5: 136 – 137, 138 – 159, 160 – 161, 175, 176 – 178, 179, 187 – 188

Defendant Constantino Gulmatico, M.D. (“Dr. Gulmatico”), moves (Seq. No. 3) for an Order, pursuant

to CPLR 3212, granting summary judgment in his favor, or granting partial summary judgment and a limitation

of the triable issues.

Defendants Wigbert S. Godoy, M.D. (“Dr. Godoy”) and Beth Israel Medical Center s/h/a Mount Sinai

Brooklyn Hospital (“Mount Sinai Brooklyn”; and together, “MSB Defendants”) separately move (Seq. No. 4)

for an order, pursuant to CPLR 3212, granting summary judgment in their favor, dismissing Plaintiffs’

complaint against them, and amending the caption to remove them from the action.

Defendants Umut Sarpel, M.D. (“Dr. Sarpel”), Kusuma Nio, M.D. (“Dr. Nio”), and Mount Sinai

Morningside s/h/a Mount Sinai St. Lukes Hospital (“Mount Sinai Morningside”; and together, “Morningside

Defendants”) separately move (Seq. No. 5) for an order, pursuant to CPLR 3212, granting summary judgment

in their favor and dismissing Plaintiffs’ complaint against them.

Plaintiffs oppose all three motions as to all Defendants. 1

1 of 22 [* 1] INDEX NO. 505790/2021 NYSCEF DOC. NO. 194 RECEIVED NYSCEF: 09/04/2024

Plaintiffs commenced this action on March 11, 2021, asserting claims of medical malpractice and lack

of informed consent in connection with treatment and care rendered to Andres Collazo (“Mr. Collazo” or “the

patient”) from July 23, 2020 to August 12, 2020, including a surgery which took place on July 24 at Mount

Sinai Brooklyn and two follow-up surgeries at Mount Sinai Morningside. Co-plaintiff Amelia Collazo also

asserts a loss of services claim.

Mr. Collazo, then 62 years old, was admitted to Mount Sinai Brooklyn from the emergency department

on July 23, 2020, with symptoms including epigastric/abdominal pain and elevated white blood cell count. An

abdominal CT scan showed acute calculous cholecystitis (inflammation of gallbladder) and a gallstone

measuring 1 cm. After admission to the medical floor, he was treated by attending physician Abdo Balikcioglu,

M.D. (“Dr. Balikcioglu”), surgical consult Dr. Gulmatico, and cardiology consult Augusto Paiusco, M.D. (“Dr.

Paiusco”), among others. Dr. Paiusco, the cardiologist, evaluated him as “intermediate risk” overall for surgery

and recommended withholding Plavix, a blood thinner he was prescribed for prior cardiovascular disease.

On July 24, 2020, at 4:51 p.m., Dr. Gulmatico performed a laparoscopic cholecystectomy (gallbladder

removal) as the primary surgeon, with assistance from general surgeon Wigbert Godoy, M.D. (“Dr. Godoy”).

Dr. Gulmatico authored an operative report following the surgery on July 24, in which he reported that the

gallbladder was initially covered with the omentum, and there was some oozing from the gallbladder bed after

dissection which was “controlled using electrocautery.” He placed a Jackson-Pratt drain to collect fluid. He

recorded the patient was “fairly stable” after a relatively “unremarkable” procedure. Dr. Gulmatico also

authored a second operative report on July 30 with more detail. Dr. Godoy’s role in the surgery, according to

operative reports and testimony of the doctors, was limited to placing trocars, holding graspers and sutures, and

maneuvering the camera.

The patient remained at Mount Sinai Brooklyn for post-operative monitoring through July 28, 2020. In

the days following the surgery, he had serosanguinous drainage in the Jackson-Pratt drain without gross blood.

He was restarted on Plavix by cardiologist Dr. Paiusco on July 26. Dr. Gulmatico examined the patient on July

27, noting his abdomen was “soft, non-distended [with] minimal trocar site tenderness,” and cleared him for

2 of 22 [* 2] INDEX NO. 505790/2021 NYSCEF DOC. NO. 194 RECEIVED NYSCEF: 09/04/2024

discharge pending evaluation by the cardiologist. Dr. Paiusco examined him on July 28, noting elevated

troponin but assessing him as stable for discharge. He was discharged home by attending physician Dr.

Balikcioglu around 2:30 p.m.

The following morning at approximately 8:30 a.m., the patient returned to Mount Sinai Brooklyn with

acute onset abdominal pain. He was admitted to the ICU at 11:39 a.m. A CT scan of the abdomen and pelvis

revealed a large amount of blood. At 2:35 p.m., a CT angiogram was performed but “failed to demonstrate [the]

source of bleeding” (Mount Sinai Brooklyn July 29 records, at 11). He received three blood transfusions. He

was examined by Dr. Gulmatico at 7:15 p.m. and ultimately transferred to Mount Sinai Morningside “for

further close monitoring and to have interventional radiology and possible embolization of the site of bleeding,

if necessary.” He was diagnosed with “post-op intra-abdominal hematoma.”

On July 29, the patient arrived at Mount Sinai Morningside ICU at 7:49 p.m. General surgeon Dr. Nio

co-signed a resident’s note to “closely monitor vitals” and perform serial blood tests, and to proceed to

exploratory surgery if his condition worsened.

On July 30, Dr. Nio noted his dropping hematocrit and worsened transaminitis (liver enzymes) and

brought the patient to the operating room. Dr. Nio performed a laparoscopy, which was converted to an open

laparotomy, and liver specialist Dr. Sarpel took over this portion of the surgery. The procedure revealed a large

amount of blood around the liver and spleen and a “large subcapsular hematoma at segment VI of the liver.”

According to the operative report, after surgically removing or “deroofing” the hematoma, “there was a large

liver laceration with active bleeding.” The active bleeding was controlled, but the patient became

hemodynamically unstable and had to be transferred to the SICU with an open abdomen and temporary

packing. Dr. Sarpel’s operative report similarly stated that “the hematoma was unroofed and we exposed the

underlying hepatic parenchyma. There was a laceration in the liver within which there was active bleeding from

a branch of an hepatic vein.”

The following day, July 31, Dr.

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