Munoz v. Clark

199 P.3d 1283, 41 Kan. App. 2d 56, 2009 Kan. App. LEXIS 31
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kansas
DecidedJanuary 30, 2009
Docket98,860
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 199 P.3d 1283 (Munoz v. Clark) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Munoz v. Clark, 199 P.3d 1283, 41 Kan. App. 2d 56, 2009 Kan. App. LEXIS 31 (kanctapp 2009).

Opinion

Hill, J.:

In this medical malpractice case, the evidence suggests that as a standard of care, when a surgeon has received a report from the pathologist that casts doubt upon what the surgeon thinks he has accomplished with the surgery, then that surgeon must take steps to reconcile the two beliefs. Here, the surgeon chose to ignore the pathologist report and tell the patient and her referring physician that he had successfully removed the patient’s ovaries laparoscopically. He had not. They were finally removed 2 years later. After losing in district court, the surgeon raises several issues in this appeal. He contends there is no expert testimony showing his negligence caused the pain and suffering and damages to his former patient. Because there is such evidence, we hold the district court properly denied the surgeon’s motion for judgment as a matter of law. We deal with other issues raised by the surgeon, denying any relief but amending the judgment to' order the deduction of a small amount for the cost of a sonogram.

We give a brief history of the .plaintiff s condition and treatment

Relevant to this case, Margarita Munoz’ medical experiences started on March 13, 2002, when she asked Dr. Josie Norris, her primary care doctor, to remove an intrauterine device, commonly called an IUD. Munoz had been experiencing daily bleeding for 2 months before this appointment. Norris tried but was unable to remove the IUD. So, Norris referred her to Dr. Barnett’s office where Dr. Gordon B. Clark treated her. On June 7, 2002, Munoz *58 consulted with Clark, who performed a physical exam. Clark’s office notes show that Munoz was mostly asymptomatic, except for dysmenorrhea, which is painful cramping that occurs during menstruation, and abnormal uterine bleeding.

Clark advised Munoz that her pelvic sonogram showed the presence of a complex adnexal mass arising from her right ovary, which could possibly be a cyst or could be cancerous. Because of her history of ovarian cysts, Clark stated that one alternative treatment for her was the removal of her ovaries through laparoscopic surgery. Munoz chose that alternative.

On August 7, 2002, Clark did the laparoscopic surgery and believed he surgically removed Munoz’ ovaries, fallopian tubes, and IUD. Clark sent the removed tissues to a pathologist for examination. From that sample, the pathologist determined that Clark had removed mostly uterine tubes but had only grazed the ovarian surface. As a result, the pathologist stated in her report that “no ovarian tissue is identified on gross examination” and that “the [macroscopic features support diagnosis, above.”

But Dr. Clark did not contact the pathologist to discuss her findings or conduct any tests that could possibly explain the discrepancy. Instead, he chose not to rely on the pathology report, believing he had successfully removed Munoz’ ovaries. Despite the discrepancy between his clinical findings and the pathology report, on August 16, 2002, Clark personally told Munoz that he had removed her ovaries, fallopian tubes, and IUD. And, because he believed he had removed her ovaries, Clark started hormone replacement therapy and prescribed Prempro to ward off surgically induced menopause.

In his other postoperative actions, Dr. Clark continued to manifest his belief that he had removed Munoz’ ovaries. He sent a letter to Dr. Norris, the primary care doctor, telling her of his treatment of Munoz. As he did with Munoz, Clark did not advise Norris of the discrepancy between his clinical findings and the pathology report. Instead, Clark told Norris he had removed both of Munoz’ ovaries, tubes, and IUD and that he had prescribed Prempro for Munoz. Based on Clark’s letter, Dr. Norris assumed Munoz no longer had ovaries and treated her accordingly.

*59 Our review of the record discloses that at least at one point Dr. Clark had doubt about the removal of her ovaries. In his operative report, Clark dictated that he was unable to separately identify the ovaries:

“Following the hysteroscopy tire patient underwent laparoscopic evaluation. There were no adnexal masses. By introducing 1 cm trocar through the anterior abdominal wall at inferior aspect of the umbilicus this revealed a complex distinct swollen fallopian tubes wrapped around the posterior aspect of the uterine fundus and heading to the posterior cul de sac. The ovaries could not be definitively identified separate from the tubo-ovarian complex.” (Emphasis added.)

Then, in his deposition taken later, Clark indicated that “at the time of surgery, . . . there was no identifiable, normal ovarian tissue structures.” When reminded of this statement at trial, Clark conceded that he did state that he would be dependent upon the pathologist’s findings but only on the issue of whether there was ovarian cancer or not.

Unaware of this discrepancy after her surgery, Munoz went back to her normal life. She went to work. During this time, Munoz experienced severe abdominal pain, breakthrough bleeding, and premenstrual headaches. But Munoz missed no work because of these symptoms. However, in April 2004, because these symptoms continued, Munoz visited an emergency room. At the hospital, the doctors conducted an ultrasound examination of her pelvis as well as a CT scan. The reason for the CT scan was because the emergency room physician’s physical examination of Munoz revealed a mass in her uterus. This was problematic since Munoz allegedly did not have ovaries. The sonogram report stated: “In view what appear to be prominent cystic changes in both adnexal areas, we are requesting a CT scan of the pelvis to help better delineate these fluid-filled structures in view of the history according to the patient of the ovaries being removed.” (Emphasis added.)

The test results cast doubt on the belief that Munoz had no ovaries. After the results of the CT scan were received, Munoz was notified that “they found abnormal findings on the CT scan and that it was very important that she go right away to see a gynecologic surgeon because we didn’t know what indeed this mass was in her pelvis.” The CT scan report specifically stated that the ap *60 pearance of the large lobulated multicystic mass “suggests ovarian neoplasm.” An ovarian neoplasm is a tumor of the ovary.

Concerned by this, Munoz consulted with Dr. Michael Morrison, an obstetrician and gynecologist. Morrison diagnosed Munoz’ condition as endometriosis, which is an inflammatory response in the tissues that leads to adhesion formation. This condition can cause severe pelvic pain. Morrison further determined that the specific cause of Munoz’ pelvic pain came from her endometriomas and adhesions. He said endometriomas in itself refers to ovaries containing endometrial tissues. In other words, her ovaries were causing her pain.

Morrison then told Munoz that he believed her ovaries might still be in her body because ovaries do not regenerate, even if a surgeon cuts off a piece of an ovary. Morrison based his belief that Munoz still had her ovaries, in part, on the discrepancy between Clark’s operative' report and die pathology report. With this belief in mind, Dr. Morrison discontinued Munoz’ hormone replacement therapy, thinking that the Prempro may have some association with her breakthrough bleeding.

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Bluebook (online)
199 P.3d 1283, 41 Kan. App. 2d 56, 2009 Kan. App. LEXIS 31, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/munoz-v-clark-kanctapp-2009.