Peter Lotze, M.D. v. Amanda Howton and John Howton

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 17, 2011
Docket01-10-00143-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Peter Lotze, M.D. v. Amanda Howton and John Howton (Peter Lotze, M.D. v. Amanda Howton and John Howton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Peter Lotze, M.D. v. Amanda Howton and John Howton, (Tex. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

Opinion issued March 17, 2011

In The

Court of Appeals

For The

First District of Texas

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NO. 01-10-00143-CV

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Peter Lotze, M.D., Appellant

V.

Amanda Howton and John Howton, Appellees

On Appeal from the 125th District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Case No. 2009-47341

MEMORANDUM OPINION

          The issue in this interlocutory appeal is whether the trial court abused its discretion by denying a motion to dismiss health-care-liability claims.  Appellant Peter Lotze, M.D. moved to dismiss appellees Amanda Howton and John Howton’s medical-malpractice claims on the ground that the Howtons filed a deficient expert report.  See Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code Ann. § 74.351(a), (l) (West Supp. 2010).  The trial court denied the motion to dismiss.  We affirm.

I.                  Background

          For the purposes of reviewing the sufficiency of the challenged expert report, the relevant facts as stated in the report are that Amanda suffered from long-standing pelvic and urinary problems, including endometriosis that first occurred when she was a teenager, causing pelvic pain.  After her third child was born, Amanda began suffering from urinary incontinence.  Her gynecologist implanted a prosthetic urethral sling, which relieved her stress incontinence.  Unfortunately, the sling caused multiple urinary‑tract infections that increased urinary frequency and caused new bladder‑related pelvic pain.  Amanda was referred to urogynecologist Dr. Peter Lotze to determine the cause of her new pain and urinary‑tract infections.  Surgery resolved her pelvic pain related to endometriosis.  But she still suffered from recurring urinary‑tract infections and bladder pain.  Dr. Lotze recommended to Amanda implanting a spinal neurostimulator, the Medtronic InterStim, to treat her bladder‑related pain.  Although a unilateral device was initially discussed with Amanda, Dr. Lotze implanted bilateral Medtronic InterStim neurostimulator devices.

Afterwards, Dr. Lotze conducted at least seven adjustments to the left InterStim device for various reasons: it was not working; it shocked Amanda; it needed repositioning; and it needed generator replacement.  The urethral sling was eventually removed, which resolved Amanda’s recurring urinary‑tract infections and bladder and pelvic pain.  Later, the left InterStim device was removed because it was not working and was no longer necessary.  Amanda developed severe and constant back pain on her left side radiating from her spine, causing “foot drop” and sensory‑deficit numbness in her left lower extremity.

The Howtons filed suit against Dr. Lotze, Medtronic, Inc., and Stuart Ison, a Medtronic representative, for fraud, negligence, and the unauthorized practice of medicine.  The day after the Howtons filed the original petition, they filed the original expert report and curriculum vitae from Dr. J. Antonio Aldrete.  In the expert report submitted in support of the Howtons’ claims, Dr. Aldrete opined that when the bilateral Medtronic InterStim neurostimulator devices were implanted, “Dr. Lotze did not make the association between the urethral sling and these recurrent infections at this time, but instead focused on ‘interstitial cystitis’ or some other form of noninfectious bladder hyperactivity.”  Dr. Aldrete stated that his review indicated that the devices “seem to have been placed to manage her recurrent bladder pain (which ultimately was found to be due to her recurrent urinary tract infections from the sling).”  According to Dr. Aldrete, Dr. Lotze failed to discuss with Amanda the possible side effect of nerve damage as a risk of implanting the devices.  Dr. Aldrete also stated that bilateral InterStim placement was not approved by the Food and Drug Administration at the time of the surgery.  He attributes Amanda’s back pain to damage to the sacral nerve roots, which prevents her from walking significant distances, climbing stairs, driving, and sitting for extended periods of time.  Dr. Aldrete concluded that Amanda developed chronic inflammation in the spinal cord and arachnoiditis due to “repeated instrumentation and manipulation of the InterStim devices” around her nerve roots.

          Dr. Lotze filed an objection to the expert report, challenging Dr. Aldrete’s qualifications to render an expert report regarding urology, gynecology, treatment of urine frequency problems, or treatment with the InterStim device.  Dr. Lotze’s objection also disagreed with the suggestion that it was improper to continue using the left InterStim device.  Attached to Dr. Lotze’s objection were exhibits, including portions of Amanda’s medical records.  Dr. Aldrete supplied a supplemental report responding to the objection.  This was followed by another objection from Dr. Lotze, which disagreed with Dr. Aldrete’s report, in part based on the underlying medical records.  Dr. Aldrete prepared yet another supplemental report in response, and Dr. Lotze again objected.

          Ultimately Dr. Lotze filed a motion to dismiss the claims against him, contending Dr. Aldrete’s expert report was based on factual mistakes in examining Amanda’s medical records.  The motion to dismiss was accompanied by 36 exhibits, which for the most part are Amanda’s medical records.  The Howtons responded and objected that the motion was “an attempt to cross‑examine Plaintiffs’ expert witness, rather than to properly challenge a preliminary witness report.”  Dr. Lotze filed a reply in which he reinterated his factual disagreement with the expert report by stating, “Plaintiffs ignore the fact that Dr. Lotze’s argument is that Dr. Aldrete did not understand the records he already had reviewed.”

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Peter Lotze, M.D. v. Amanda Howton and John Howton, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peter-lotze-md-v-amanda-howton-and-john-howton-texapp-2011.