Cooper v. Cooper-Ciccarelli

928 N.E.2d 672, 77 Mass. App. Ct. 86
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedJune 22, 2010
DocketNo. 09-P-1267
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 928 N.E.2d 672 (Cooper v. Cooper-Ciccarelli) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Appeals Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cooper v. Cooper-Ciccarelli, 928 N.E.2d 672, 77 Mass. App. Ct. 86 (Mass. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

Meade, J.

The plaintiff, as the executrix of the estate of her late husband, appeals from the dismissal of her medical malpractice action for failing to post a bond after an adverse decision of a medical malpractice tribunal. See G. L. c. 231, § 60B. The plaintiff claims that the tribunal erred in determining that the plaintiff’s offer of proof relative to the defendant, [87]*87Ann Cooper-Ciccarelli, D.O., an osteopath, was not sufficient to raise a legitimate question of liability appropriate for judicial inquiry. We affirm.

1. Prior proceedings. The plaintiff commenced this action against three physicians, the defendant, Dr. Andrew Ciccarelli, Dr. Zubin D. Irani, and the Cooley Dickinson Hospital in Northampton. With respect to the defendant, the complaint alleged that as a result of the defendant’s negligence in failing to order additional x-rays because the initial x-ray was not of sufficient quality to adequately diagnose the condition of the plaintiff’s decedent, Irving Cooper. According to the complaint, Cooper became “paralyzed and suffered serious bodily injuries, great pain of body and mind, incurred medical expense[s] and death.” Based upon these allegations, the plaintiff brought claims against the defendant and doctors Ciccarelli and Irani for wrongful death, and conscious pain and suffering. The plaintiff also asserted a claim based on respondeat superior against the hospital. Each of the defendants denied the allegations in their respective answers.

Pursuant to G. L. c. 231, § 60B, the Superior Court convened a medical malpractice tribunal. Prior to the tribunal proceeding, the plaintiff submitted her offer of proof as the statute requires. After hearing arguments, the tribunal issued reports relative to each defendant. With respect to Ciccarelli, Irani, and the hospital, the tribunal determined that the plaintiff’s offer of proof, if properly substantiated, was sufficient evidence to raise a legitimate question of liability appropriate for judicial inquiry. However, as to the defendant, the tribunal determined that the evidence presented was not sufficient. After the plaintiff failed timely to post a bond in order to pursue her claims against the defendant, the complaint was dismissed on the defendant’s motion, and a separate and final judgment entered in her favor.

2. The allegations.2 On July 18, 2007, suffering from severe back pain, seventy-nine year old Irving Cooper went to the emergency room at Cooley Dickinson Hospital. The defendant was the attending emergency room physician who was charged with Cooper’s care upon his admission. Cooper reported that [88]*88the onset of back pain resulted from his lifting groceries out of his car and later was worsened by a fall in his bathtub three days later. The bathtub fall did not involve Cooper hitting his head, neck or back, but he complained that his pain was a “ten on a scale of ten.” The defendant performed a physical examination, ordered an x-ray of his thoracic spine, and ordered four milligrams of intravenous morphine to alleviate Cooper’s pain.

The x-ray films of Cooper’s thoracic spine were interpreted by Dr. Ciccarelli, the on-duty radiologist. Dr. Ciccarelli noted what appeared to be a compression fracture deformity at T5. He found that the vertebral body heights and disc spaces were otherwise maintained. Dr. Ciccarelli did note that Cooper had minimal end plate spurring in the lower thoracic spine, but that he had no destructive changes. In the end, Dr. Ciccarelli reported that Cooper’s x-rays indicated that his paravertebral soft tissues were unremarkable.

The defendant discussed Dr. Ciccarelli’s radiological findings with Dr. Irani, an interventional radiologist. Dr. Irani advised Cooper to follow up with him after his discharge to undergo an injection vertebroplasty to reduce his back pain. No further radiological studies were ordered. The defendant prescribed Cooper pain medication and a walker in the event he had ambulatory difficulties. Cooper was discharged from the hospital against the wishes of his family.

Over the course of the next two days, Cooper continued to suffer from extreme back pain. He also began experiencing numbness in his toes and legs, difficulty breathing and urinating, and ultimately an inability to move his legs or walk. By ambulance, Cooper returned to the Cooley Dickinson Hospital on July 21, 2007, where he was examined and it was suspected that he was suffering from a severe spinal cord injury. The attending emergency room physician consulted with the on-call trauma surgeon, who was at Baystate Medical Center in Springfield, and it was decided that Cooper be transferred to Baystate Medical Center for further specialty care.

Upon Cooper’s admission to the Baystate Medical Center, a spinal CT scan was taken and it indicated bone fragments in the cord at T5-T6 level. An MRI of the thoracic spine revealed a fracture deformity at T5-6 with marked impression of the thoracic [89]*89cord. Cooper was assessed as having a significant T5 fracture deformity with compression of the thoracic cord resulting in “a complete cord injury at the left of T6.” This resulted in Cooper having no motor strength in the lower extremities. The trauma team at Bay state Medical Center determined that emergency decompression and fusion would not reverse Cooper’s paralysis. As a result, on July 27, 2007, Cooper was discharged from Bay state Medical Center and transferred to an inpatient rehabilitation facility. On October 13, 2007, Cooper died. The death certificate indicated that Cooper died as a result of severe pneumonia and respiratory failure with paraplegia indicated as an underlying cause.

3. The expert opinion. The gravamen of the plaintiff’s complaint is that the three physicians departed from the proper standard of care by failing to conduct a proper radiological evaluation to rule out a “burst fracture” and exclude the possibility of paralysis. The theory of liability against the hospital was respondeat superior. As part of her offer of proof with respect to her claims against the defendant, the plaintiff offered an expert opinion report of an emergency room physician, Dr. R. Kent Sargent.3

Dr. Sargent noted that a thoracic spine compression fracture can be either of two general tonds, the most common of which results from “injury of osteoporotic (thin) bones” which “causes the anterior (front) part of the vertebral body to be crunched into a wedge shape.” Although this kind of injury is very painful, it does not injure “any of the more posterior parts of the vertebral body which protect the spinal cord,” so the spine is not damaged. This kind of compression fracture, Sargent stated, was “amenable to treatment with injection vertebroplasty, the procedure Dr. Irani does and which he offered to Mr. Cooper.”

According to Dr. Sargent, the other major type of thoracic vertebral body compression fracture is called a “burst fracture.” With this type of compression fracture, “a force is exerted more [90]*90straight down and not at a forward angle (as in the usual compression fracture).” With this type of injury, there is no “wedge-shaping of the anterior (front) of the vertebral body.” Instead, Dr. Sargent stated that the entire vertebral body is damaged, or crushed, including the posterior part where the spinal cord is located.

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Bluebook (online)
928 N.E.2d 672, 77 Mass. App. Ct. 86, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cooper-v-cooper-ciccarelli-massappct-2010.