Elliott v. Robinson

612 So. 2d 996, 1993 WL 7912
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 20, 1993
Docket24290-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 612 So. 2d 996 (Elliott v. Robinson) 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
Elliott v. Robinson, 612 So. 2d 996, 1993 WL 7912 (La. Ct. App. 1993).

Opinion

612 So.2d 996 (1993)

Retha R. ELLIOTT, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
Dr. E.B. ROBINSON, Defendant-Appellee.

No. 24290-CA.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Second Circuit.

January 20, 1993.
Rehearing Denied February 18, 1993.

*998 Law Offices of Edmund M. Thomas by Edmund M. Thomas, Law Offices of James Don Thomas by Thomas M. Lockwood, Baton Rouge, for plaintiff-appellant.

Mayer, Smith & Roberts by Paul R. Mayer, Jr., Shreveport, defendant-appellee.

Before NORRIS, VICTORY and STEWART, JJ.

NORRIS, Judge.

The plaintiff, Retha R. Elliott, appeals a judgment that dismissed her medical malpractice claim against Dr. E.B. Robinson, a general surgeon who performed a carpal tunnel release on her left hand in February 1984. On appeal she urges that Dr. Robinson breached the standard of care by failing to offer her a course of conservative treatment, which would have obviated the need for surgery, and by negligently injuring the motor and sensory branches of her median nerve during the surgery; and that as a result of these injuries she suffered causalgia, pain syndrome and permanent disability of her thumb. Finding that the trial court committed manifest error in rejecting each of these claims, we reverse and render.

Factual background

At the time of the surgery giving rise to this claim, Mrs. Elliott was a 51-year old rural mail carrier in Haughton, Louisiana. She had prior experience with carpal tunnel syndrome in her right hand in the late 1960s and early 1970s, when she was doing office work operating business machines. The carpal tunnel is a space deep in the tissues of the wrist, on the same side as the palm of the hand. It is bounded on three sides by the carpal bones and on one side by a ligament. Through the carpal tunnel run several tendons and the median nerve, which supplies sensation to parts of the hand and motor function to the muscles in the thumb. Carpal tunnel syndrome ("CTS") is an irritation of the median nerve by fibers of the transverse carpal ligament; it is usually caused by repetitive finger and wrist motion.

Mrs. Elliott testified that when the first symptoms of CTS appeared in her right hand in the 1960s, a Dr. Martin put her hand in a cast for six weeks, after which she wore a splint intermittently for two or three years; she felt that this "staved off" surgery. R. p. 590. By 1970, however, she saw Dr. Rayburn, a former partner of Dr. Robinson's, and he recommended a carpal tunnel release. She underwent the surgery in April 1971; although Dr. Rayburn's office records show that she may have had some residual numbness, Mrs. Elliott testified that the 1971 surgery relieved her symptoms.

In 1976 Mrs. Elliott became a rural mail carrier. This job requires quick, repetitive manual work such as sorting and binding the mail, loading it into her car, and driving her delivery route. Sometime in 1983 she began to experience numbness in her left hand, similar to that which had prompted the therapy and surgery in the right hand years before. These symptoms, however, were not very severe and usually abated after she gave her left hand "a couple of slings." R. p. 537. Suspecting CTS, Dr. Robinson sent her in January 1984 to Dr. Winston Brown, a neurologist, for a nerve conduction study. Dr. Brown found her "sensory latency" prolonged and diagnosed a "mild focal neuropathy in the distal aspect of the [median] nerve, probably at the carpal tunnel." Dr. Robinson suggested surgery to release the median nerve. He testified that he offers conservative treatment only in rare, specific instances; for active people who use their hands in repetitive movement, conservative treatment is a disservice as CTS is bound to recur, so he prefers to go straight to surgery. R. p. 481.

About a week later, on January 31, Mrs. Elliott had a spell in which she "went blind" momentarily, followed by several hours of blurred vision and tingling in her scalp. She went to Dr. Robinson, who promptly sent her to Bossier Medical Center. Although Mrs. Elliott insists she did *999 not want the carpal tunnel release, Dr. Robinson's office notes show that this was one of the reasons for admitting her. At the hospital she was examined by a neurosurgeon, Dr. Warren Long, who could not discern any "defined, neurological symptoms" to explain her spell; however, he saw no reason to defer the carpal tunnel release. Mrs. Elliott signed a consent for this surgery (though she adamantly denied this, the document is present in the hospital records) and Dr. Robinson performed it on February 1, 1984.

Dr. Robinson's operative notes state that he identified and "spared" the median nerve through its entire length. He excised the transverse carpal ligament and freed the nerve down into the distal palm and up into the forearm. He testified that the operation went well; his office notes report that within the first two or three weeks after surgery Mrs. Elliott told him the operation helped her and she did not feel numb any more. Mrs. Elliott, however, testified that she awoke from surgery with excruciating pain in her left thumb, unlike anything she had suffered before. She described this pain as "like fire" or like a "catch" that needed to be "pulled." R. pp. 555, 608. The pain persisted, Mrs. Elliott said, even after she went home the next day with her hand in a cast, and afterwards. She did, however, resume delivering mail about two weeks later with the help of her husband, a retired postal carrier. Because of the pain, she had to keep her hand wrapped, which interfered with her work.

Dr. Robinson's office records noted that on February 23 she complained her wrist was "somewhat stiff" and she could not flex it; by March 3 he noted multiple complaints again and remarked in his office notes that it was "going to be real hard to get a good result in this case." R. p. 521. On March 15 Mrs. Elliott complained that she was getting weaker in the hand, but Dr. Robinson told her this had nothing to do with the surgery; she also still had pain when moving her thumb. Feeling she was making no progress, Mrs. Elliott asked Dr. Robinson for a referral and did not return to him.

On March 26 she went to Dr. F.C. Boykin, a neurologist. She reported pain starting in her thumb and running up her wrist; slight weakness in the left hand; weakness when abducting the left thumb (stretching the thumb across the palm); and slight weakness in opposing the left thumb to the little finger (pressing them together).[1] Dr. Boykin noted a loss of muscle mass in the thenar eminence (fleshy part at the base of the thumb), which is often associated with lack of nerve supply, and a purplish discoloration of her wrist. He recommended an EMG to verify this, while noting possible tendinitis in the left thumb.

Mrs. Elliott returned to Dr. Brown on March 28 for the EMG and a nerve conduction study. The EMG showed patterns of denervation in the left thenar eminence, apparently of recent origin and suggesting a partial interruption of the nerve supply. The nerve conduction study, however, was within normal limits, leading Dr. Brown to conclude that the February operation was successful in its intended result. R. p. 368. He noted in his April 26, 1984 report that she had normal strength for "opposing the thumb across the palm," but could not recall asking her to press the thumb to each finger (the motion that other witnesses described as opposition). Ex. P-5; R. p. 384. Mrs. Elliott did complain of constant soreness and intermittent pain in the base of her thumb, and of mottled, discolored skin on her wrist. Dr. Brown referred her to Dr. Clinton McAlister, an orthopedic surgeon, in early May.

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Bluebook (online)
612 So. 2d 996, 1993 WL 7912, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/elliott-v-robinson-lactapp-1993.