McCarley v. Anesthesia Service Medical Group CA4/1

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 20, 2021
DocketD074353
StatusUnpublished

This text of McCarley v. Anesthesia Service Medical Group CA4/1 (McCarley v. Anesthesia Service Medical Group CA4/1) 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
McCarley v. Anesthesia Service Medical Group CA4/1, (Cal. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

Filed 4/20/21 McCarley v. Anesthesia Service Medical Group CA4/1 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

COURT OF APPEAL, FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION ONE

STATE OF CALIFORNIA

STEPHANIE MCCARLEY, D074353

Plaintiff and Respondent, (San Diego Super. Ct. No. 37- 2014-0018445-CU-MM-CTL) v.

ANESTHESIA SERVICE MEDICAL GROUP, INC., et al.,

Defendants and Appellants.

APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of San Diego County, Eddie C. Sturgeon, Judge. Affirmed. Horvitz & Levy, S. Thomas Todd, H. Thomas Watson, Scott Dixler; Wilson, Elser, Moskowitz, Edelman & Dicker, and Robert W. Harrison for Defendants and Appellants. Kenneth M. Sigelman & Associates, Kenneth M. Sigelman; Siminou Appeals and Benjamin I. Siminou for Plaintiff and Respondent. Plaintiff and respondent Stephanie McCarley sued defendants and appellants Anesthesia Service Medical Group, Inc. (ASMG) and Dr. Edgar Canada, among others, for medical negligence, alleging she suffered a brain injury when Dr. Canada failed to take steps to raise her blood pressure while under anesthesia for a procedure. She made a Code of Civil Procedure

section 998 offer to Dr. Canada, to which he did not respond.1 The matter proceeded to trial, and McCarley obtained a judgment that included damages for future attendant care and prejudgment interest based on the section 998 offer. Defendants appeal. They contend Dr. Canada was within the standard of care as a matter of law; the trial court improperly excluded proposed expert testimony regarding polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS); the award of future attendant care was based on speculation; and the section 998 offer was invalid. We conclude substantial evidence supports the jury’s negligence finding and the future attendant care award, and defendants do not establish exclusion of the expert testimony was reversible error. We further conclude defendants forfeited their section 998 argument. We affirm the judgment. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND I. Underlying events On March 21, 2013, McCarley went to Rady Children’s Hospital for an endoscopy, a nonsurgical procedure to examine the digestive tract. At the time, she was an 18-year old high school senior, and had been diagnosed with PCOS approximately three years earlier. Gastroenterologist Neelish Tipnis

1 Statutory references are to the Code of Civil Procedure unless otherwise noted.

2 performed the endoscopy, and Dr. Canada was the anesthesiologist. Among other drugs, Dr. Canada used an inhaled anesthetic, sevoflurane. Anesthetic drugs can cause blood pressure to drop. Systolic blood pressure measures the pressure as the heart beats and squeezes blood out, while diastolic pressure measures the lowest point before the next beat. They can be combined into mean arterial blood pressure, or MAP, expressed in millimeters of mercury (mmHg). During and after the procedure, McCarley’s MAP was in the 50 mmHg range for at least 40 minutes (at one point dropping slightly below that range). The brain is capable of autoregulation, or maintaining even cerebral blood flow, for a certain range of blood pressure. The parties’ experts agreed the upper limit was 150 mmHg, but disagreed as to whether the lower limit was 50 or 70 mmHg, as we discuss post. The experts referenced medical texts, which we briefly summarize here. Miller’s Anesthesia contains a chapter by Piyush Patel and John C. Drummond that addresses autoregulation, stating in part: “In normal human subjects, the best available data—and they are limited—are consistent with the limits of autoregulation occurring at MAP values of approximately 70 and 150 mm Hg . . . . The lower limit of autoregulation (LLA) has been widely quoted as an MAP of 50 mmHg. Although this number may be correct for some animal species, the data available argue that the LLA is considerably higher in humans . . . .”

Cottrell and Patel’s Neuroanesthesia, by James E. Cottrell and Piyush Patel, also addresses autoregulation. It states in part: “Traditionally, many textbooks report that CBF [cerebral blood flow] is maintained relatively constant within the range of [MAP] from approximately 50 to 150 mmHg . . . . However, several investigators have noted that most available evidence suggests that . . . the lower limit of

3 autoregulation in humans is substantially higher on average than 50 mmHg (at least 70 mmHg) . . . . As a consequence . . . , caution is advised when using these traditional values . . . .”

Both textbooks cite a 1997 letter from Drummond to the editor of Anesthesiology (Journal of the American Society of Anesthesiologists), titled, “The Lower Limit of Autoregulation: Time to Revise Our Thinking?” There, he stated the “popular conception regarding the normal lower limit” of 50 mmHg “may be substantially in error,” noting it was likely based on data originating in the 1950’s. He stated more recent data supported a limit of 70 mmHg, and “it may be appropriate for our community to adjust its thinking . . . .” McCarley’s family reported behavioral changes after she awoke from the procedure, including acting silly and laughing uncontrollably. At the same time, she became much better at art. McCarley returned to Rady a few days later for an evaluation, but the cause of her altered behavior was unclear. She and her family would later report many other issues, including diminished speech processing, concentration and focus problems, short-term memory loss, severe fatigue, headaches, insomnia, and an increased heart rate and heat intolerance (which would lead to a diagnosis of dysautonomia, a nervous system disorder). She started seeing a neurologist, Dr. Michael Lobatz. He diagnosed her with cognitive dysfunction, and she attended a brain injury rehabilitation program that he directed. He later determined her symptoms were caused by an anoxic brain injury during the endoscopy. Some of the symptoms improved or resolved and certain therapies helped, but she eventually plateaued.

4 McCarley had been conditionally accepted to California State University San Marcos, but she did not pursue this plan. After graduating high school with help from her teachers, she took one or two art classes a semester at Palomar College. Her family drove her to class and helped with her daily needs. II. Litigation In June 2014, McCarley filed a complaint for medical malpractice against Dr. Canada, ASMG, Dr. Tipnis, and Rady. In March 2015, McCarley made a section 998 offer to Dr. Canada, to which he did not respond. We discuss the section 998 offer in more detail post. Dr. Tipnis and Rady later moved for summary judgment, which the trial court granted. The case proceeded to a jury trial in January 2018. During voir dire, defense counsel asked whether anyone had familiarity with PCOS. In McCarley’s opening statement, her counsel told the jury PCOS was a term that “may come up,” and explained it was a “hormonal imbalance syndrome . . . .” Defense counsel addressed PCOS in his opening statement too, stating McCarley was diagnosed with the condition before the procedure and its significance was lost on her treating physicians. He was “confident” Dr. Sherry Franklin, an endocrinologist who treated McCarley, would “allow that had she thought about [PCOS] . . . , she would have acknowledged . . . it was associated prominently with fatigue.” He further stated depression and other issues were connected to PCOS, and “[t]his is reinforced, you’ll learn, in medical literature . . . and from the experts who deal with PCOS,” indicating they were endocrinologists like Dr. Franklin. He later said psychiatrist Dr.

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McCarley v. Anesthesia Service Medical Group CA4/1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccarley-v-anesthesia-service-medical-group-ca41-calctapp-2021.