Maedgen v. Kolodny

384 S.W.2d 410, 1964 Tex. App. LEXIS 2384
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 19, 1964
Docket14399
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 384 S.W.2d 410 (Maedgen v. Kolodny) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Maedgen v. Kolodny, 384 S.W.2d 410, 1964 Tex. App. LEXIS 2384 (Tex. Ct. App. 1964).

Opinion

COLEMAN, Justice.

This is a medical malpractice case. The trial court withdrew the case from the jury and entered a verdict for the defendant. The question presented is whether the evidence was sufficient as a matter of law to raise a question of fact as to the existence of negligence on the part of appellee which was the proximate cause of the damage suffered by appellant.

Appellant, Mrs. Maurice Maedgen, was afflicted with a condition known as Ptosis of the right upper eyelid, characterized by abnormal drooping to the extent that it covered practically all of the right eye. She was unable to maintain the eyelid in an open position by use of the levator muscle normally employed in raising and lowering one’s eyelid.

Dr. George Robert Kolodny undertook to improve this condition by a fascia-lata sling-type operation, by which support is given the upper eyelid by attaching it to the occipital frontalis muscles of the forehead by means of a strip of fascia-lata tissues from the patient’s thigh. He testified that it is a relatively simple matter to so adjust the strips of fascia-lata that the lower edge (tarsal plate) of the upper lid will cover the desired portion of the eye. It was his testimony that at the conclusion of the operation he had placed the lid in a position covering the upper one-third of the cornea. He further testified that when such an operation is a complete success the lid, in forward gaze, covers the upper third of the cornea and cannot come down in downward gaze. In upward gaze, the lid remains immobile also. Movement of the lid can be attained only by an upward wrinkling of the forehead. The cornea is the transparent tissue which blends into the white part of the eye, or sclera, and covers the iris, or colored part of the eye. The unaccustomed exposure of the eye, caused by the operation, tends to cause the development of corneal ulcers. To combat the drying effect of constant exposure of the cornea, the doctor prescribed drops of *412 methácellulose in the eye three or four times a day.

The doctor testified that after the operation, so far as a layman could tell, the right eye was open the same amount as the left eye. The operation was performed August 11, 1960 and appellant was released from the hospital on August 22. The doctor saw her again on August 29 and found the lid in excellent position and she was doing very well when he saw her on September 26. On January 4, 1961, he found that she had a marginal ulcer on her eye at the three o’clock position. He saw her for the last time on January 10, at which time he found that the ulcer had healed. A marginal ulcer consists of a disruption of the epithelium near the edge of the cornea, or an infiltration of white cells into the stroma of the cornea, which may build up to the point that they come to the surface of the cornea. The medical testimony was to the effect that the term “marginal ulcer”, as used in the profession, did not refer to exposure ulcers, but that the cause of their appearance was not definitely known. Ap-pellee testified that little points of in-flamation of the cornea, called punctate keratitis, do come about from exposure of the cornea. He also testified that corneal ulcers may be caused by trauma and that if the eye is open things get into it more readily. He testified that an exposure ulcer could become very severe to the extent that it would penetrate the eye - and cause its loss, but in such a case the ulceration would be most severe in the lowermost part of the cornea because it would be the most exposed. He stated that if the eyelids do not close during sleep, exposure keratitis may develop. He wrote in the hospital records that on August 17 and 19 his examinations revealed that the lid was in an excellent position. He testified that the position in which he found the lid on those dates was exactly the position he had placed it and desired it to be.

Dr. Russell Wolfe, an ophthalmologist, was called as a witness by Mrs. Maedgen. He first saw her May 27, 1961, at which time she had a very extensive ulceration of the right cornea, covering two-thirds of the cornea. Because of its crucial importance-to the case, his testimony will be reviewed extensively. He testified that the condition-would have taken a long time to develop' since it looked rather invalid and chronic,, but that it was a condition that might develop in a few days. In answer to a hypothetical question as to whether he had an opinion based on reasonable medical probability as to the cause of the condition of the-eye which he saw, he stated that he did have an opinion and that he thought “it was-due to the drying-out of the cornea, because of its more or less chronic or permanent exposure to air. * * * If it were wide open to the air during day light hours. * * * during her waking hours * * that would be enough to cause the trouble.” He testified that on the first day he saw her the position of Mrs. Maedgen’s eyelid was high, though he could not say just where-it was positioned. The right eye was muclx more open than the left. He further testified, in answer to a question as to whether ophthalmologists in Harris County would' perform an operation, such as Mrs. Maed-gen had, in such a manner as to seek to1 place the tarsal plate of the upper eyelid at or slightly above the limbus, that he didn’t think anybody would deliberately plan ail-operation to leave the cornea ■ exposed that much for long periods of time, and that it would be contrary to good surgery and tO' the usual and ordinary standards of care-of ophthalmologists of Harris County, Texas, to actually and deliberately so place a lid as to expose the cornea at all times.

Dr. Lowe testified that on March 20, 1961, he examined Mrs. Maedgen and found the fissure of her right eye considerably more open than that of her left eye. She had a marginal corneal ulcer of the right eye at the 10 o’clock position visible without raising the eyelid. The upper lid was at about the upper limbus and that the lim-bus was the area where one can see no further colored part of the eye. He did not remember that there was any reddening of *413 the eyeball or anything in addition to the corneal ulcer. During his treatment of Mrs. Maedgen his tests revealed that the lid was placed at a point too high for her reflex action during sleep, called Bell’s phenomena, to completely roll the cornea of her right eye under the lid. This is one way in which the eyeball of a normal person is kept moist. He testified that he last saw her on May 19, 1961, and that the position of her right eyelid was exactly the same as when he first saw her. He testified that if as the result of an operation an eye was kept from being thoroughly lubricated or watered, an exposure ulcer could come at any time. “Most likely it would come sometime, probably sometime at the beginning you ought to see some signs of an exposure ulcer * * * ”

Dr. Sylvan Brandon undertook the treatment of Mrs. Maedgen’s eye on June 1, 1961. He testified that exposure of the cornea shouldn’t be the result of the operation which was performed on Mrs. Maedgen and that “the operation is not done, ever, this way, so as to leave the cornea exposed.”

Dr. Wendell D. Gingrich testified that when the corneal surface of the eye dries there gets to be a haze of corneal substance, then a sore spot where there is wrinkling of the epithelium and vision becomes increasingly poor to the extent that it is lost.

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384 S.W.2d 410, 1964 Tex. App. LEXIS 2384, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maedgen-v-kolodny-texapp-1964.