Oetjens v. Medtronic, PLC

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Michigan
DecidedJanuary 16, 2025
Docket2:22-cv-11220
StatusUnknown

This text of Oetjens v. Medtronic, PLC (Oetjens v. Medtronic, PLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Michigan primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Oetjens v. Medtronic, PLC, (E.D. Mich. 2025).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN SOUTHERN DIVISION VICKI OETJENS and ERIC OETJENS, Case No. 22-11220 Plaintiffs, Honorable Laurie J. Michelson Vv. COVIDIEN LP, MEDTRONIC USA, INC., and MEDTRONIC, INC., Defendants.

OPINION AND ORDER DENYING DEFENDANTS’ MOTIONS FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT [34] AND TO STRIKE [35]

Vicki Oetjens had surgery in October of 2020. Had all gone to plan, a diseased portion of her colon would have been removed, then the healthy ends would have been stapled together. But when the surgical stapler was deployed, no staples fired. This left a hole in Vicki’s large intestine requiring surgical repair. Vicki had to use an ostomy bag until she had a second surgery to reverse the first and reconnect her intestine. When Vicki developed a hernia at the site of her incision, that second surgery led to a third. So in June of 2022, Vicki and her husband Eric Oetjens sued the entities that manufactured the stapler: Medtronic USA, Inc., Medtronic, Inc., and Covidien LP (collectively “Covidien”). (ECF No. 1; see ECF No. 10.) The Court partially granted Covidien’s motion to dismiss, leaving three remaining claims: two product liability claims for defective manufacturing (negligent manufacture and breach of implied

warranty) and Eric’s derivative claim of loss of consortium. (ECF No. 24.) Covidien now moves for summary judgment on all three. (ECF No. 34.) It also moves to strike one of the Oetjens’ proposed expert witnesses (ECF No. 35) and argues for the exclusion of another in its summary judgment motion. The parties jointly stipulated to stay their remaining expert discovery deadlines until Covidien’s motions are resolved. (ECF No. 36.) For the reasons below, the Court denies Covidien’s motions for summary judgment and to strike. I. Background Because Covidien seeks summary judgment under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 56(a), the Court views the facts in the light most favorable to the nonmovants, Vicki and Eric Oetjens. See Raimey v. City of Niles, 77 F.4th 441, 447 (6th Cir. 2023). A little anatomy is helpful in conceptualizing the underlying medical issue. The bowel consists of the large and small intestines. The large intestine includes the colon followed by the rectum. ANATOMY OF THE LARGE INTESTINE ee

clon Descending Cecum — Appendix :

nectum ——— Sigmoid colon Ante —

In October of 2020, Vicki Oetjens underwent bowel resection surgery to treat her diverticulitis. The plan was to remove a diseased portion of Vicki’s lower (..e., sigmoid) colon, then reconnect the healthy end of the colon to the rectum to restore the natural flow of the digestive system. (See ECF No 37, PageID.435—4386, 534-535.) Relevant here, the medical term “anastomosis” refers to the second step—both the procedure in which a surgeon connects two tubular body structures (e.g., “performing an anastomosis’) and the connection itself that is created (e.g., “a strong anastomosis between the colon and rectum”). During Vicki’s preoperative appointment, her surgeon, Justin Chamberlain, explained that “a relatively short segment of [her] colon” needed to be removed, which would leave “an adequate length of remaining colon that seemed like, at least based on a CAT scan, would easily reach the rectum for a good anastomosis.” Ud. at PageID.437.) He also advised that things could look different once in surgery. (See id. at PageID.437—438, 517.) But her imaging proved accurate. Chamberlain “found nothing surprising from an anatomic standpoint that would have changed [his] preoperative discussion with [Vicki].” Ud. at PageID.439; see id. at PageID.446, 451.) He successfully removed “around six inches or so” of diseased colon—what he called “a very regular amount of colon to have to remove during these surgeries” (id. at PageID.451)—and, according to his operative note, was “[slatisfied with the dissection” (ECF No. 39-1, PagelD.681). “Up until that point,” Chamberlain testified, “surgery was going beautifully and there were no other issues.” (ECF No 37, PageID.554; see id. at PageID.439, 449-452; ECF No. 39-1, PageID.681.) So he proceeded to the next step.

To create the colorectal anastomosis, Chamberlain used a surgical stapler, as he had many times before. (See ECF No 37, PageID.469.) Specifically, he used the “EEA [End-to-End Anastomosis] Circular Stapler With Tri-Staple Technology,” a single-use surgical stapler designed, manufactured, and distributed by Covidien. (ECF No. 10, PageID.45—46.) Per Covidien’s description, the device is “intended to be used during” exactly the sort of procedure Vicki was having, that is, “laparoscopic surgical procedures of the [digestive] tract.” (ECF No. 39-1, PageID.895; see ECF No. 37, PageID.536 (Chamberlain testifying that “in terms of model of stapler the EEA stapler is... and away [the] most common method of reconnecting a colon and rectum together’).) The surgeon first gets the stapler into position where he intends to create the anastomosis. Unless properly positioned, the stapler will not fire. (ECF No. 39, PageID.654 (citing ECF No. 39-1, PageID.902); see ECF No. 37, PageID.409 (“The stapler is designed to not be able to fire unless everything is properly lined up and there is a green bar showing in the window indicating its readiness.”); ECF No. 39-1, PageID.900.) The surgeon then fires the stapler by fully depressing its handle. (ECF No. 39, PageID.654 (citing ECF No. 39-1, PageID.904—905).) “An[] audible and tactile firing indicator will provide additional feedback of firing completion.” (ECF No. 39-1, PageID.905.) When the stapler is deployed, two things happen nearly simultaneously. The stapler fires a concentric ring of staples (to create a circular- stapled anastomosis connecting the tubular body structures) and cuts away excess tissue (to enable a clean seal). dd. at PageID.678; see id. at PageID.895.) The surgeon finally removes the stapler and disposes of it. (See id. at PageID.678, 895.)

But the stapler malfunctioned during Vicki’s surgery. Chamberlain removed the stapler from its sterile packaging at the appropriate time in the operating suite, properly positioned and readied the stapler at the anastomosis site, and manually depressed the stapler without incident (ECF No. 10, PageID.46—48; see ECF No. 37, PagelD.454—-457; ECF No. 39-1, PageID.681)—but it misfired (see ECF No. 37, PageID.408, 458). According to Chamberlain’s operative report, “when the [stapler] was removed it became apparent that [it] had cut but not fired staples.” (ECF No. 39- 1, PageID.681.) In other words, the stapler had only “half worked” (ECF No. 37, PageID.410); the knife blade deployed as intended, cutting “a large hole in the rectum,” but no staples had fired, leaving the two sections of bowel unconnected (id.; see id. at PageID.458 (“During that loosening [when the stapler is released and removed after deployment], the colon and rectum basically fell apart, so there was never any connection made. At that point there was a hole in [Vicki’s] rectum. So my assumption at that point was the stapler cut but did not fire the staples.”)). This posed an issue. It would have been “not as big of a deal” if the hole were in Vicki’s colon rather than her rectum, Chamberlain explained in his deposition, because the colon is long to begin with—that is, “[t]here are many ways to... release colon to make more colon reach down to more rectum” so the two can be reconnected. (Ud. at PageID.466.) In contrast, “[t]he hole in the rectum is a problem because you only have so much rectum. Most humans only have about 15 centimeters of rectum” (id.), whereas “[t]he average length of the human colon is around six feet” (id. at PageID.434). “[A]nd the lower you have to go on the rectum for an anastomosis there’s

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Oetjens v. Medtronic, PLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oetjens-v-medtronic-plc-mied-2025.