Hale v. Venuto

137 Cal. App. 3d 910, 187 Cal. Rptr. 357, 1982 Cal. App. LEXIS 2183
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 1, 1982
DocketCiv. 27403
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 137 Cal. App. 3d 910 (Hale v. Venuto) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hale v. Venuto, 137 Cal. App. 3d 910, 187 Cal. Rptr. 357, 1982 Cal. App. LEXIS 2183 (Cal. Ct. App. 1982).

Opinion

Opinion

TROTTER, J.

Plaintiff appeals from a judgment of nonsuit in a medical malpractice action arising out of surgery performed by defendant on plaintiff.

Facts

Plaintiff, Joni Hale, had a history of her left knee slipping out of joint since 1968. Her care was ultimately taken over by defendant, Dr. Ralph J. Venuto, an orthopedic surgeon who recommended corrective surgery after plaintiff suf *915 fered a major dislocation of the left kneecap in July of 1975. As a result of this surgery, plaintiff suffers from combined peroneal and tibial palsy of her left foot, a condition evidenced by numbness in her big toe and three adjoining toes, the numbness extending about half way up her foot on both the top and the bottom.

There is conflicting evidence as to the type of warning defendant gave plaintiff prior to surgery in regard to postoperative complications. Both plaintiff and defendant testified that plaintiff was advised that she might still experience postsurgical knee problems, including inability to walk altogether. Defendant, however, disputes plaintiff’s testimony that she was not specifically warned about possible postsurgical numbness to either her left leg or foot.

The surgery was performed July 31,1975. Plaintiff was placed under general anesthetic and remained unconscious throughout the operation. The defendant performed a “Modified Hauser” surgical procedure which has the effect of realigning the entire mechanism controlling the kneecap in order to correct the attendant knee dislocation. During the operation a pneumatic tourniquet was applied to plaintiff’s leg for the purpose of facilitating the operation procedure by cutting off the blood supply to the leg to create a dry (bloodless) surgical field. Following surgery plaintiff’s leg was wrapped with a padded dressing consisting of expandable bandage extending from the toes to the groin. The defendant doctor was scheduled to take a few days vacation after the operation, but he nevertheless checked the plaintiff in the recovery room within one hour of the surgery. He also wrote detailed orders to be followed in the care of plaintiff during his absence.

Plaintiff testified that she first awakened around dinner time on the day surgery was performed, but that she did not regain full consciousness until the following morning. At that time she became aware of a throbbing pain in her left leg which was concentrated on the knee and foot. Plaintiff recalls first complaining about the pain to the hospital nurses the morning after surgery. Nothing was done about the pain, however, until she was checked by Dr. Rod-man, defendant’s associate, on the second or third postoperative day. (The hospital records show that Dr. Rodman actually visited plaintiff the morning following surgery and noted that plaintiff was suffering “vague paresthesia” or tingling “without sensory loss.” He also noted “no dorsa flexion,” or inability to flex or raise foot up.) Following Dr. Rodman’s visit, plaintiff’s bandages were cut off in the foot area which gave plaintiff some relief and after which she experienced a tingling sensation throughout the whole foot.

Electromyogram tests performed on plaintiff subsequent to surgery, indicated involvement of both the peroneal and tibial nerves which control the upward and downward motion of the foot. The defendant rendered followup care after *916 surgery for about one year and during this time period plaintiffs complaints of pain and numbness in her left foot continued.

Dr. David A. Johnson, a neurologist, examined plaintiff on behalf of defendant before the trial. He testified that his examination revealed some numbness of plaintiffs left foot and found “loss to pinprick and cotton” over the top and bottom of the foot more on the medial than the lateral side involving all the toes except the little toe. He attributed this condition to an apparent “combined lesion involving both a portion of the posterior tibial and peroneal nerves.” He further testified that causation would vary from individual to individual but that foot numbness could be created by compression of a nerve, producing a lack of blood flow, resulting in injury to the nerve. He also stated that in the course of leg surgery nerve damage can result from “compartment syndrome” or internal bleeding inside either the anterior (front) or posterior (back) leg compartments. However it was his opinion that plaintiffs injury could not be explained by the occurrence of a “compartment syndrome” because that would only explain the peroneal component and would not explain the posterior tibial component in the back of the leg. Dr. Johnson did not believe that the surgical incision made in performing the modified Hauser procedure could have caused the problem because the incision is made “anteriorly and far away from where the nerves are.” He also was of the opinion that plaintiffs foot numbness was a permanent injury.

Plaintiff also called to testify Dr. Richard G. Lambert, a board certified orthopedic surgeon, who had performed literally thousands of knee surgeries in his medical career. Dr. Lambert was of the opinion that the risk of combined peroneal or tibial palsy following the performance of a Hauser procedure was statistically nonexistent.

After reviewing the medical records, Dr. Lambert noted that exploration of the nerve was never done and that no definitive diagnosis as to plaintiffs condition was ever made. He concluded that the most probable cause of plaintiffs injury was external pressure either from the tourniquet used during surgery or from the application of tight bandages after the operation. He considered the probability of nerve damage during the actual surgical procedure to be small because the surgical knife “isn’t long enough to reach over and cut that nerve. ” Lastly, he was of the opinion that a compartment syndrome could not have caused the injury.

As to the use of a tourniquet preparatory to knee surgery, Dr. Lambert testified that this was standard-procedure and that although the surgeon rarely applies the tourniquet himself, the surgeon is responsible for the tourniquet because he “causes it to be put on and causes it to be removed. ” He also noted that from his experience tourniquet pressure ordinarily does not result in *917 damage to the peroneal and tibial nerves unless “it is incorrectly applied or it is applied over a bony prominence or the tourniquet itself is defective. ” As to improper bandaging, Dr. Lambert noted that the danger is in causing constriction in a given portion of the leg “as in the case of the peroneal nerve which lies directly over the bone of the fibula,” since in his opinion “it doesn’t take very much pressure in a certain specified area to cause damage to the nerve.”

The defendant himself testified that “the surgeon controls the tourniquet pressure by looking at the wound” so that the surgeon can direct any needed adjustments in the pressure gauge to be made by the anesthesiologist. With respect to the application of the bandages, there was evidence that defendant visited plaintiff in the recovery room less than an hour after surgery and during this visit defendant remained “long enough to check [plaintiff] and make sure she was okay.” He wrote orders to be followed in the postoperative care of plaintiff during his absence, including: “Do not remove Joni’s dressing.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
137 Cal. App. 3d 910, 187 Cal. Rptr. 357, 1982 Cal. App. LEXIS 2183, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hale-v-venuto-calctapp-1982.