Collings v. Northwestern Hospital

277 N.W. 910, 202 Minn. 139, 1938 Minn. LEXIS 805
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedFebruary 4, 1938
DocketNos. 31,523, 31,524.
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 277 N.W. 910 (Collings v. Northwestern Hospital) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Collings v. Northwestern Hospital, 277 N.W. 910, 202 Minn. 139, 1938 Minn. LEXIS 805 (Mich. 1938).

Opinion

Gallagher, Chief Justice.

Action for personal injuries alleged to have resulted from the negligent administration to plaintiff Lydia Collings of a liypoder-moclysis. There were verdicts for defendant in each case, and these appeals are taken from orders denying plaintiffs’ motions for a new trial.

Plaintiff, a woman of about 60 years of age, was admitted to defendant hospital November 27, 1935, and two days later underwent a kidney operation. Shortly after the operation her physician ordered that a hypodermoclysis be given her. The technique to which that term applies consists of the introduction into the body of a patient of a solution composed of distilled water and common salt, known as normal saline solution, by means of a hollow needle, connected with the container of the solution by tubing, which is inserted through the skin in a region of the body having numerous lymphatic structures. The solution passes from the container through the tubing and needle and is deposited in the sub-skin tissue. From thence the lymphatic structures carry the fluid into the general circulatory system. The rate of flow of the solution is as a rule about five cc. a minute through one needle.

*141 The physician’s order was carried out by a hospital interne and nurse, and 1,000 cc. of normal saline solution was accordingly administered to plaintiff. On this occasion plaintiff was still under the influence of the ether used during the operation. As a result she has no memory of any pain or discomfort caused her by this procedure, although during its continuance she was given morphine because of pain. In this instance the solution was introduced into the pectoral region, just below the breast. She suffered no undesirable after-affects.

Two days later, December 1, her physician again prescribed a hypodermoclysis of 1,000 cc. The same interne, again assisted by a nurse, inserted a hollow needle in the front medial portion of each thigh. Plaintiff was conscious during this operation and almost immediately began complaining of intense pain. To relieve this, the interne added about 15 cc. of novocain to the solution. He then left the room, the nurse remaining in charge. About 45 minutes later the nurse telephoned the interne that plaintiff still complained of pain, and he ordered her to stop the hypodermoclysis. Soon afterward he visited plaintiff and discovered areas of puffed and discolored flesh about four inches in diameter around each of the places where the needles had been inserted. During the hypo-dermoclysis about 600 cc. of the solution had passed into plaintiff’s body. In the course of the next few weeks the skin and subcutaneous tissue in those areas died and were cut out. In the craters thus formed skin was grafted, and both of them have since healed.

Plaintiff alleges that the death (necrosis) of these tissues was the result of defendant’s negligence, and she seeks damages for the attendant pain and suffering and for permanent detriment resulting.

Plaintiff contends that there was sufficient evidence to support a jury finding that the solution used was not normal saline solution, but contained some other harmful ingredient. The trial court charged the jury that there was no evidence from which they could infer that normal saline solution was not used. Plaintiff assigns this instruction as error.

*142 There was no direct evidence whatsoever that the fluid introduced into plaintiff’s body was not normal saline solution. The flask containing it was so labeled, and the routine followed in its preparation and distribution is such as to make such a mistake unlikely. But it is asserted that the jury could infer from the facts that the interne did not test the solution before using it, that no test was made before the remainder of the solution was discarded after the termination of the hypodermoclysis, and that plaintiff suffered great pain because of its introduction into her body, that the solution used was not normal saline but was made of some substance actively destructive of tissue.

The fact that no test was made is no evidence that a harmful substance was present in the solution, nor is the fact that suffering accompanied its instillation into her body; the process is obviously of a character likely to cause pain.

There is no testimony that a normal saline solution interacts with human flesh in a destructive fashion. But medical experts for both sides testified that necrosis is not necessarily produced by an actively destructive substance. It may be induced by any condition obstructing or destroying the circulation of the body fluids through tissue. The function of the lymphatic structures of the body is to conduct fluids present in the tissue back to the circulatory system. If these conduits become obstructed or if the fluid content of the tissue is so great that the lymphs cannot perform.their purpose, or if circulation is not strong enough to pump new fluid into the tissue, the tissue becomes waterlogged and is incapable of receiving new fluids from the circulatory system. Body cells require the materials carried by the blood for their sustenance and regeneration; without these substances they die. Thus an inert solution introduced into body tissue may be the cause of necrosis if the effect of its presence is to impede or block the circulation of the blood through that tissue.

At the time she entered defendant hospital - plaintiff was more than 30 pounds overweight. She -had undergone a- serious operation the previous summer. At the time of her admittance she was suffering not only from a pathological kidney condition, but was *143 also afflicted with edema of the legs and ankles. During the kidney operation plaintiff of necessity lost a good deal of blood. To bring about a recovery, her physician deemed it advisable to introduce into her body a quantity of fluid to expedite blood building and to aid circulation. An accepted method of achieving this purpose in the circumstances existing after an operation is by hypoder-moclysis.

The record discloses that sometimes a necrosis will follow a hypodermoclysis, although due care is used and no complicating factors are apparent. It is also fairly inferable from what has been said that the necrosis complained of here resulted from the edema-tous condition of plaintiff’s thighs. Edema indicates that the tissues are overcharged with fluid and that the patient’s circulation is not strong enough to correct it. The instillation of still more fluid into those tissues would have the effect of burdening the tissue to a further extent and of further curtailing circulation to those regions, with necrosis of those tissues as a result. It might be found that necrosis did not follow the first hypodermoclysis because there was no edema of plaintiff’s pectoral region.

Despite the fact that the unfortunate result might by inference be attributed to other causes, plaintiff insists that the jury should have been permitted to infer from the fact that injury resulted that it was caused by some solution other than normal saline; and that the jury should have been permitted to infer further, from the “fact” established by this first inference, that defendant was negligent in administering this harmful solution.

This insistence is in effect, though not in terms, an assertion that the doctrine of res ipsa, loquitur

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Bluebook (online)
277 N.W. 910, 202 Minn. 139, 1938 Minn. LEXIS 805, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/collings-v-northwestern-hospital-minn-1938.