People v. Protopappas

201 Cal. App. 3d 152, 246 Cal. Rptr. 915, 1988 Cal. App. LEXIS 478
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 13, 1988
DocketG002111
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 201 Cal. App. 3d 152 (People v. Protopappas) 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
People v. Protopappas, 201 Cal. App. 3d 152, 246 Cal. Rptr. 915, 1988 Cal. App. LEXIS 478 (Cal. Ct. App. 1988).

Opinion

Opinion

WALLIN, J.

A jury found Tony Protopappas, a licensed dentist and oral surgeon, guilty of the second degree murder of three of his patients. He appeals. 2

Protopappas opened his Costa Mesa dental clinic in 1974. By September of 1982, he employed a staff of five dentists, many dental assistants, and two office managers. He was the only dentist at the clinic licensed to administer general anesthesia and was solely responsible for injecting the initial doses of drugs used for general anesthesia patients. He personally standardized *156 these initial doses or “setups” which were prepared daily by his assistants. The staff dentists were also given standardized instructions on how to maintain patients under anesthesia.

Kim Andreassen

At a frail 85 pounds, 24-year-old Kim Andreassen went to Protopappas’s clinic with her mother on September 21, 1982. Although she was not experiencing any pain or problems with her teeth, she decided to have an initial examination after Protopappas finished her mother’s evaluation. Andreassen told Protopappas she suffered from lupus (a multisystem disease inhibiting normal growth), total kidney failure requiring thrice weekly dialysis, high blood pressure, anemia, a heart murmur, and chronic seizure disorder. Andreassen also told Protopappas she was taking anticoagulants, high blood pressure medication, and phenobarbital. After the examination, Protopappas told her she needed a root canal, three fillings, and a crown. He recommended local anesthesia to perform the work. Andreassen protested, refusing to have any work done unless she was asleep. Protopappas warned her that, because of her poor health, there was a very high risk she could die under general anesthesia.

Andreassen returned to the clinic with her mother on September 28. The office manager, who had contacted Andreassen’s general physician, informed Protopappas she was not to be placed under general anesthesia even for a short time. Andreassen was given preoperative medications to be taken 30 minutes before her next appointment. Protopappas was later heard telling the office manager of his reluctance to sedate Andreassen intravenously, saying, “I don’t want to do that because that’s a death for sure.”

Having failed to take her premedication as directed, Andreassen arrived at the clinic for treatment between 12 noon and 1 p.m. on September 30. She then took the medication. Around 2 p.m., Protopappas began an intravenous (I.V.) setup. At Andreassen’s suggestion, he started it in her foot because of her collapsed veins. He administered his standard doses of drugs at 10- to 20-second intervals. He also gave her a local anesthetic. By the time he finished administering the drugs, Andreassen was asleep.

Protopappas began the scheduled treatment. Within five to twenty minutes, Andreassen’s lips turned purple, her face pale blue, and her pulse became irregular. Protopappas administered oxygen and her lip color returned to normal. At one point, upon getting restless and opening her eyes, *157 she was given brevital. 3 When an assistant noticed Andreassen was taking very shallow breaths followed by big deep breaths, he directed Protopappas’s attention to the irregular breathing. Protopappas responded, “Maybe that’s normal for her because she is so ill.” 4 He completed the dental work. Andreassen was breathing normally when he left the room at 4:30 p.m.

Ten to fifteen minutes later her breathing became shallow and irregular, her pulse became weak, and her face turned blue. The attending assistant gave her oxygen, and when Andreassen did not respond, she called another dentist, Dr. Brown, to help. He observed that Andreassen had gone into respiratory collapse and immediately placed an oxygen mask on her face. Two to three minutes later, Protopappas arrived and gave her oxygen. When she failed to respond, he left the room to get additional medication. Either Protopappas or his assistant brought in narcan, a medication to reverse the effects of the drugs she had received. Protopappas administered the narcan. Fire department paramedics were called shortly thereafter.

When the paramedics arrived, Andreassen was not breathing, her pupils did not respond to light, she had no pulse, and she was blue. Protopappas was holding a disposable oxygen mask over her face. He reported the patient had been in this condition for 20 minutes, and he did not have any positive pressure oxygen equipment. 5 Despite the efforts of the paramedics, Andreassen was clinically dead when she arrived at the hospital.

The coroner concluded the general anesthesia resulted in critical cardiac arrest with the disseminated lupus being a significant contributing factor. Two anesthesiologists and two oral surgeons testifying as expert witnesses opined that she died of a massive drug overdose. One oral surgeon stated the amount of drugs given were massive amounts for anyone, “let alone a sickly 88 pound girl.” He further explained the combination of drugs administered did not make any sense. “It is not a regimen to sedate a patient. It is illogical. It is—I don’t know anybody who does this kind of thing for sedation or anesthesia. It is a use of multiple depressant agents. You never *158 know which agent is doing what. You have no way of knowing where the patient is with regard to response to any of these medications. It is crazy. It is really an illogical approach to treating people.”

Dr. Frank McCarthy, chair of the anesthesiology department at the University of Southern California’s dental school, testified that Andreassen’s irregular breathing was symptomatic of severe toxicity and should have been interpreted as urgent and life threatening. He concluded Protopappas did not recognize or respond to Andreassen’s Cheynes-Stokes breathing. Moreover, his delay in calling the paramedics endangered her life and, without effective cardio-pulmonary resuscitation (CPR) after her heart stopped, she suffered brain death.

Protopappas testified in his own defense. He felt the deep cavity in Andreassen’s tooth needed a root canal or the lupus would cause infection to spread and would become life threatening. He did not put her under general anesthesia but used conscious sedation instead. In his opinion Andreassen’s irregular breathing did not present an emergency and, having felt a pulse, he did not feel CPR was necessary. When she failed to respond to the administration of oxygen and narcan, however, he put a local anesthetic under her tongue with a drug to stimulate the heart.

Patricia Craven

Except for her swollen tonsils, 13-year-old Patricia Craven was active and healthy when she went to Protopappas on February 8, 1983, to have four wisdom teeth pulled, eight teeth filled, and a tooth crowned. 6 Her mother remained with her as Protopappas administered his standard setup of intravenous medications at approximately 11 a.m. He assured Craven’s mother the enlarged tonsils would not be a problem but that her daughter would be watched more closely.

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Bluebook (online)
201 Cal. App. 3d 152, 246 Cal. Rptr. 915, 1988 Cal. App. LEXIS 478, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-protopappas-calctapp-1988.