Nolen v. United States

571 F. Supp. 295, 1983 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14018
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedSeptember 7, 1983
DocketCiv. A. 79-137
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 571 F. Supp. 295 (Nolen v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nolen v. United States, 571 F. Supp. 295, 1983 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14018 (W.D. Pa. 1983).

Opinion

OPINION

ROSENBERG, District Judge.

This matter is before me by virtue of the Federal Tort Claims Act, 28 U.S.C. § 1346(b), § 2671 et seq. The plaintiff, Theodore Nolen, Jr., brought this action for damages because of the alleged medical negligence of the doctors of the Veterans Administration (VA). The plaintiff claims that on numerous occasions, while being treated at the Veterans Administration medical facilities, the doctors failed to properly test, diagnose and treat his condition, resulting in great physical and psychological damages. Jurisdiction is conferred upon this court by 28 U.S.C. § 1357.

The plaintiff is 54 years of age, married, with 6 children. He had worked at various manual labor jobs since he left school after the eighth grade. In May or June of 1970, he was working at his last job with a brick company when his physical problems began. He first complained of back pains, loss of weight, headaches and swelling of the feet and ankles. After he failed to improve under the care of his family physician, Dr. Charles Zimmerman, Nolen was referred, as a veteran, to the VA hospital in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. He first visited there for tests on July 9, 1970. He returned for further testing on July 29 and was admitted as a patient on August 30. He was released on September 4. During this time the plaintiff was examined by Dr. Robert Vincent and Dr. Charles Kalko of the VA Hospital. Both ordered myelograms performed. These tests are diagnostic. Contrast (pantopaque) material is infused into the spinal column, and as the dye within the spinal cavity is viewed by the examiner, evidence of possible obstructions or tumors become visible. Because some of the dye escaped the test area on August 25, a myelogram was repeated on September 1. This myelogram, performed with the plaintiff in a prone position, was found to be normal.

The plaintiff contends that testing in a prone position was medical error, especially when the first (incomplete) test had indicated a suspicious mass. He asserts that he should have been placed in a supine or lateral decubitus 1 position for the September 1 myelogram in order to reveal possible lateral lesions in the thoracic region. The plaintiff also contends that the physicians *297 at the VA hospital were negligent in not performing a Queckenstedt test or tests 2 on the cerebrospinal fluid to determine if he had a spinal cord tumor, or whether his problems were caused by multiple sclerosis as the doctors had suspected.

Dr. Kalko, a resident physician at the VA hospital, had scheduled Nolen for exploratory surgery after the first myelogram, in order to determine whether a spinal cord tumor was present. However, the senior VA physicians cancelled this surgery, which was not subsequently rescheduled, because the second myelogram was “normal”.

Based upon the tests conducted, Dr. Vincent concluded that Nolen was a “suspected multiple sclerosis patient”. The plaintiff was released and notified to return for a follow-up examination in six weeks, or sooner if new symptoms were to arise. Nolen was admitted again to the VA hospital on September 14 and discharged on September 27. During this time tests were ordered by Dr. Kalko. They included brain scans and a cerotid angiogram. The results of these tests were negative and the plaintiff was discharged, again with the diagnosis of most probable multiple sclerosis.

The plaintiff was then admitted to the Presbyterian University Hospital for 13 days beginning on November 7. He was afterwards admitted three additional times in January, March and April, 1971. Dr. Joseph Delaney, a physician associated with the VA hospital stated that he formed the impression during the plaintiffs visits to this hospital that Nolen was suffering from “possible late onset Multiple Sclerosis”. A ten-day course of the drug ATCH was prescribed. This apparently did not improve the plaintiff’s condition. Again, the plaintiff criticizes the tests, or lack of tests, which failed to investigate the possibility of a spinal cord tumor as being responsible for his condition.

From 1970 to 1972 the plaintiff’s condition continued to deteriorate. Despite multiple hospital admissions and tests, Nolen progressively lost his ability to walk, and to control his bowel and bladder functions. The plaintiff became a functional paraplegic 3 sometime in December 1970, and was compelled to use a wheelchair to move about. During these hospital admissions, Nolen was treated for numerous urinary tract infections and for decubitus ulcers which were caused by his immobility. Upon each discharge, the diagnosis was almost uniformly that the plaintiff was suffering from “multiple sclerosis”.

The first divergence from this view (other than the initial opinion of the VA resident, Dr. Kalko), came from a preliminary opinion of Dr. Robert Baker after the plaintiff was admitted to Shadyside Hospital in December, 1972. Dr. Baker ordered further myelography when he suspected that the plaintiff might have a primary cord lesion, which could have been responsible for his symptoms. The plaintiff then underwent his third myelogram examination in December, 1972, two years and three months after his second myelogram at the VA hospital. This time views were obtained from other than in the prone position, and what were described as arachnoid cysts were found in the thoracic and cervical areas. However, after these tests were completed both Dr. Baker and Nolen’s family physician, Dr. Zimmerman, stated the opinion: “That there was no operative lesion here and the arachnoid cyst did not explain his complaint”. (Def. Ex. J). Nolen was then discharged with the diagnosis of “multiple sclerosis”.

Almost one year later, Nolen was again admitted to the VA hospital for the purpose of treating his decubitus ulcers and a urinary tract infection. Approximately four weeks later, he was discharged, again with a primary diagnosis of “multiple sclerosis”.

The plaintiff returned to the VA hospital from June 13 through July 12, 1974. During this visit Nolen’s fourth myelogram *298 study was performed on June 18, where different views (bilateral decubitus) were again obtained. The results of these tests indicated the presence of what were described as arachnoid cysts at spinal area designations “T-1 and T-2 levels”. Dr. Eric Holm scheduled the plaintiff for surgery, a “laminectomy”, to be performed on June 28. Prior to this operation, Dr. Holm explained to the plaintiff that he might benefit from the removal of these masses, although if he did indeed have multiple sclerosis, this condition would not be alleviated. (Osgood Dep. 38-39).

During the surgery by Dr. Holm, four masses were noted in the dura, which is the tissue surrounding the spinal cord. Three small masses were present, along with the largest mass which was described as a “granuloma”, 4 anterior to the T-2 nerve root. It measured 1cm. X 5.5cm. X .3cm. (Tr. 355). Significantly Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
571 F. Supp. 295, 1983 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14018, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nolen-v-united-states-pawd-1983.