Green v. Pan

CourtDistrict Court, M.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 18, 2021
Docket1:18-cv-01962
StatusUnknown

This text of Green v. Pan (Green v. Pan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, M.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Green v. Pan, (M.D. Pa. 2021).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE MIDDLE DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA

LORRAINE GREENE, : CIVIL ACTION NO. 1:18-CV-1962 : Plaintiff : (Judge Conner) : v. : : UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, : : Defendant :

MEMORANDUM Plaintiff Lorraine Greene1 alleges that Dr. Ming Pan, a surgeon employed by the United States Department of Veterans Affairs, committed medical malpractice while performing her laparoscopic cholecystectomy. This procedure is commonly known as a gallbladder removal surgery or a “lap chole.” Greene seeks to impose liability on the United States pursuant to the Federal Tort Claims Act (“FTCA”), 28 U.S.C. § 2671, et seq., and 28 U.S.C. § 1346(b). We convened a bench trial in November 2020, and we now set forth our findings of fact and conclusion of law pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 52(a). As we explain in further detail herein, the court finds in favor of Greene and will award her damages in the amount of $465,000.00.

1 Although the trial transcript identifies the plaintiff as “Lorraine Green,” (see generally 11/18/20 Tr.), the records in this case clarify that the plaintiff’s name is spelled “Lorraine Greene,” (see Gov’t Ex. 1-5 at 1). I. Findings of Fact2 Greene is a 56-year old Pennsylvania resident who underwent elective gallbladder removal surgery—a “lap chole”—on August 9, 2016. (See 11/18/20 Tr.

127:8-9, 131:4-7). Dr. Pan, a general surgeon at the Lebanon, Pennsylvania Veteran’s Affairs hospital, performed the surgery with Dr. Gayle Ryan. (See Gov’t Ex. 1-6; Gov’t Ex. 21). Greene claims that Dr. Pan’s conduct during this procedure amounts to negligence and malpractice. A. Greene’s Symptoms Before Her Surgery In 2015 and 2016, Greene began experiencing abdominal pain, (11/18/20 Tr. 130:3-13, 155:17-24), and an ultrasound confirmed the presence of gallstones, (id. at

194:11-12). Greene first presented to Dr. Pan for a surgical consult in January 2016, (id. at 25:7-12), during which Dr. Pan recommended against surgery, (id. at 194:12-18). After a later visit to the emergency room for abdominal pain and vomiting, Greene presented to Dr. Pan for a second time in July 2016, at which point she elected to have her gallbladder removed. (Id. at 130:3-131:7, 194:19-195:11; Gov’t Ex. 1-4). Before Greene’s procedure, Dr. Pan apprised her of the risks and

benefits of undergoing a lap chole, and she knowingly decided to proceed with the procedure. She signed an informed consent form memorializing her decision to proceed with the elective surgery. (See Gov’t Ex. 1-5). In doing so, she acknowledged several “[k]nown risks and side effects” inherent in the procedure,

2 The following narrative represents the court’s findings of fact as derived from the record. Citations thereto include the transcript of the two-day bench trial convened on November 18 and 19, 2020, (“[Date] Tr. [page:line]”), as well as exhibits introduced by both parties, (“Greene Ex. [number]” and “Gov’t Ex. [number]”). including “{i]njury to the common bile duct . . . leading to possible need for further surgery,” “[p]ossible need for ‘open’ (non-laparoscopic) surgical procedures,” “{plossible need for further surgery on the bile ducts,” “[p]ossible significant blood loss,” “[uJnexpected change in procedure at time of surgery,” and “[lJess than complete recovery of normal functions or pain relief.” (Id. at 2). B. Laparoscopic Cholecystectomies A cholecystectomy is the surgical removal of a patient’s gallbladder. (Id. at 1). A traditional, textbook anatomy of one’s gallbladder is represented below:

□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□ Right hepatic artery, Cystic artery iy \ A \ Left hepatic artery NA i ry _ 4 ~ if , Proper hepatic artery

a i | A | jy Aorta

gee □ P / | Splenic artery a a Cystic duct _ Gastroduodenal artery Sorinent epane Bact | AE Superior mesenteric artery Common bile duct” }

(Gov’t Ex. 43; 11/18/20 Tr. 117:5-8). A cholecystectomy can be performed “laparoscopically” or in an “open” procedure. A laparoscopic cholecystectomy requires the surgeon to insert a small

laparoscopic camera and other surgical instruments through small incisions in the patient’s abdomen while the patient is anesthetized. (Gov’t Ex. 1-5 at 1-2). The laparoscope provides the surgeon with a two-dimensional view of the patient’s

internal organs. (11/19/20 Tr. 184:21-23, 192:20-21). During this procedure, surgeons use two graspers and a dissector, enabling the surgeons to grasp, retract, dissect, clip, cut, and remove the gallbladder. (11/18/20 Tr. 187:7-18). The goal of a cholecystectomy is to identify, clip, and transect the only two structures entering the gallbladder—i.e., the cystic duct and the cystic artery—separating the gallbladder from the biliary tree, and dissect the gallbladder from the liver, allowing for removal of the gallbladder altogether. (See id. at 69:11-72:2; see also Gov’t Ex.

1-5 at 1-2). In a properly performed cholecystectomy, only the cystic duct and the cystic artery are transected. (11/18/20 Tr. 24:8-10, 24:13-25:5, 42:5-7, 50:13-20, 70:23-71:2, 83:8-22). Greene presented expert testimony from Dr. Fred Joseph Simon establishing—and the parties agree—that there are two commonly accepted methods by which surgeons can adequately identify the cystic duct and cystic

artery: the “Critical View of Safety” approach and the “infundibular” approach. (Id. at 24:3-7, 69:11-72:2, 106:18-107:17, 114:16-18; 11/19/20 Tr. 28:9-19).3 We start with the Critical View of Safety method. To obtain the critical view of safety, the surgeon follows three steps. First, the surgeon must dissect the peritoneum and

3 The parties’ experts also dispute whether documentation of the Critical View of Safety approach is required under the applicable standard of care. (See 11/18/20 Tr. 112:19-114:22 (Simon); 11/19/20 Tr. 118:10-14 (Iannarone)). fatty and fibrous tissue from what is known as the “Triangle of Calot” or the hepatocystic triangle. (11/18/20 Tr. 70:2-17, 189:10-22). The Triangle of Calot includes the space between the cystic duct, the common hepatic duct, and the

bottom edge of the liver. (Gov’t Ex. 43; 11/18/20 Tr. 70:2-17). By clearing out the Triangle of Calot, the surgeon is able to see “only two structures entering the gallbladder, a cystic artery and a cystic duct.” (11/18/20 Tr. 70:24-71:2). Although locating the common bile duct and common hepatic duct is relevant to ensure the surgeon has identified the proper structures entering the gallbladder, surgeons are not required to dissect or expose the common bile duct or common hepatic duct.4 Second, the surgeon must partially dissect the lower portion of the

gallbladder from the liver bed. (11/18/20 Tr. 71:8-10; id. at 81:1-3 (surgeon can dissect as much as is necessary to “give[] you the view” of the critical structures)).

4 We credit Dr. Simon’s testimony regarding the necessity that surgeons carefully identify and expose only those structures essential to gallbladder extraction, and avoid injury to those structures which could result in catastrophic consequences. (Id. at 89:1-10 (“You don’t go near [the common bile duct, the hepatic artery, or the portal vein] when you’re doing a laparoscopic cholecystectomy. It’s pretty obvious why. You hit the portal vein, people die very quickly. If you get into the common hepatic artery you get a fair amount of bleeding. And you don’t want to injure the common bile duct, and the basic premise always has been try not to violate the tissues near the common bile duct because you’ll disrupt the small blood vessels to the common bile duct.” (Simon)).

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Bluebook (online)
Green v. Pan, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/green-v-pan-pamd-2021.