Ferrara v. Leventhal

56 A.D.2d 490, 392 N.Y.S.2d 920, 1977 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 10490
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedApril 4, 1977
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 56 A.D.2d 490 (Ferrara v. Leventhal) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ferrara v. Leventhal, 56 A.D.2d 490, 392 N.Y.S.2d 920, 1977 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 10490 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1977).

Opinion

Shapiro, J.

In an action to recover damages for medical malpractice, plaintiff appeals from a judgment of the Supreme Court, Kings County, entered May 23, 1975, on a jury verdict in favor of the defendants Harvey R. Leventhal and the County of Nassau. We reverse and grant a new trial.

BACKGROUND OF THE CASE

This is an action based upon the medical malpractice of Dr. Harvey R. Leventhal, a neurosurgeon, and Nassau County, the owner and operator of the Nassau County Medical Center (also known as Meadowbrook Hospital) for failing to diagnose and treat plaintiff’s unruptured intracranial aneurysm with the result that it subsequently ruptured and caused serious brain damage.

The record consists of 10,709 typewritten pages, representing the trial transcript, plus a voluminous number of exhibits. While no weight of the evidence question is here involved, we [492]*492nevertheless find it necessary to review the essential facts to show why a new trial is required.

On January 12, 1972 the plaintiff, who was then 41 years of age, was admitted to Doctor’s Hospital in Staten Island complaining of "intractable” headaches. They had been present for two months and involved the area of the right forehead and eye. Although the plaintiff had a past history of sinus trouble, she had never experienced this kind of headache before October and November, 1971. Because the X rays taken at Doctor’s Hospital indicated a clotting or obstruction in the right maxillary sinus, Dr. Gordon, the plaintiff’s treating physician, performed sinus surgery. However, when her headaches and eye pain continued after the operation, Dr. Gordon brought in the defendant, Dr. Leventhal, as a neurological consultant.

Neurological examinations by Dr. Leventhal, which included X rays of the skull and an EEG, failed to show any intracranial pathology. In Dr. Leventhal’s opinion, the plaintiff’s pain over the right eye was due to the sinus operation and was to be expected.

On January 20, 1972 the plaintiff was discharged from Doctor’s Hospital. Two weeks later the plaintiff called Dr. Leventhal to complain of continuing headaches on the right side of her forehead and pain in her right eye. Without seeing her again, Dr. Leventhal arranged for her admission, on February 18, 1972, to St. Vincent’s Medical Center in Staten Island where he was a member of the hospital staff, so that he could perform a pneumonencephalogram (PEG) to investigate the possibility of a brain tumor.

The plaintiff entered the hospital on February 18, as arranged for by Dr. Leventhal, but was discharged the next day without the PEG having been performed due to the fact that it was a three-day Washington’s Birthday weekend and no work could be accomplished.

On February 28, 1972 the plaintiff was readmitted to St. Vincent’s, where she remained until March 4, 1972. The hospital record revealed that, in addition to her previous complaints of headaches on the right side of her forehead and of pain in her right eye, she had recently developed diplopia (double vision) and ptosis (dropping of the upper eyelid) of her right eye.

During this admission the plaintiff was subjected to four neurological examinations, each performed by a different doc[493]*493tor on the hospital staff; two were performed on February 28 and two on February 29. All four doctors made virtually the same findings: Diplopia on upward gaze, ptosis of the right eye, dilated right pupil, and sluggish reaction to light in the right eye. Three of the doctors made a diagnosis of involvement or paralysis of the third cranial nerve. One, as his primary consideration, recommended that an aneurysm be "ruled out” (meaning that something should be done to determine whether that condition existed). Another doctor made a diagnosis of "partial third nerve paralysis secondary to aneurysm”.

During her stay at St. Vincent’s the plaintiff was given virtually every test designed to detect an intracranial lesion, including X rays, an EEG, a PEG, and a special tap, but all were negative. However, an angiogram, or arteriogram, the only test which could reveal an intracranial aneurysm, was not performed.

Dr. Leventhal explained that he did not perform an angiogram because he had performed four thorough and complete neurological examinations of the plaintiff during this time and they failed to reveal a single neurological abnormality. However, he admitted that there was no record of any of those examinations in the hospital chart. Dr. Leventhal also admitted that proper and accepted standards of medical practice, and the rules of the hospital, required the recordation of such tests in the hospital chart.

On March 4, 1972 the plaintiff was discharged from St. Vincent’s Hospital. On March 8, 1972, while the plaintiff was at the home of her sister (Mrs. Blythe), she suddenly started screaming: "my head”, and then became unconscious for several minutes. She was taken by ambulance to the emergency room at Meadowbrook Hospital, where she was treated by Dr. Monkowski, who was then a first-year resident. Although Dr. Monkowski was given a history of the plaintiff’s case, including her treatment by Dr. Leventhal, he refused to admit her to Meadowbrook. Rather, he suggested to Mrs. Blythe that she take the plaintiff to "see her own doctor”, viz., Dr. Leventhal. An effort to reach Dr. Leventhal by phone was unsuccessful. Dr. Monkowski, after taking down the plaintiff’s medical history, had an EKG performed, but could find no organic basis for the plaintiff’s complaints and attributed her condition to her high emotional state.

On March 9, the next day, Mrs. Blythe reached Dr. Leven[494]*494thal by telephone; he asked her whether the plaintiff had gone to see an eye doctor, as he had previously instructed her to do. When Mrs. Blythe told him that an appointment had been made for Saturday, March 11, he replied that he would see the plaintiff after that appointment was kept.

After the plaintiff kept the appointment with the eye doctor (Dr. Pirundini), Mrs. Blythe tried twice the following Monday to reach Dr. Leventhal by telephone, but was unsuccessful. He did not return her calls. Over the weekend, the plaintiff’s condition had been worsening.

On March 14 the plaintiff was admitted to Columbia Presbyterian Hospital, where she later came under the treatment of Dr. Lawrence Poole, the director of neurosurgery at the hospital’s Neurological Institute. After an angiogram was taken, Dr. Poole diagnosed her condition as a “ruptured aneurysm of the right internal carotid artery at the posterior communicating junction.” The plaintiff’s brain damage was so severe that the aneurysm was rendered inoperable. Dr. Leventhal claimed that the aneurysm was inoperable because of its size and position and that he could not prevent its rupture while he treated her at St. Vincent’s.

The record of Columbia Presbyterian does not exactly indicate what caused the aneurysm to rupture. However, Dr. Leventhal testified that the aneurysm may very well have ruptured when the angiogram at Columbia Presbyterian was given, due to the injection of the foreign angiographic dye into the artery which was already damaged by the aneurysm at the time the angiogram was performed. This, he said, was one of the dangers involved in doing an angiogram on a patient who is suspected of having an intracranial aneurysm, because it is “the riskiest procedure that we can do” and that it is the very last thing that a physician should ever consider doing because it is fraught with danger.

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Bluebook (online)
56 A.D.2d 490, 392 N.Y.S.2d 920, 1977 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 10490, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ferrara-v-leventhal-nyappdiv-1977.