Ricketts v. Advanced Dental Care, LLC

646 S.E.2d 705, 285 Ga. App. 480, 2007 Fulton County D. Rep. 1636, 2007 Ga. App. LEXIS 552
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedMay 22, 2007
DocketA07A0085
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 646 S.E.2d 705 (Ricketts v. Advanced Dental Care, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ricketts v. Advanced Dental Care, LLC, 646 S.E.2d 705, 285 Ga. App. 480, 2007 Fulton County D. Rep. 1636, 2007 Ga. App. LEXIS 552 (Ga. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

Mikell, Judge.

This is an appeal from the grant of summary judgment to Advanced Dental Care, LLC (“ADC”), in Otis G. Ricketts’s action alleging negligence and dental malpractice. Mr. Ricketts alleges that he swallowed dental impression material while a dental assistant in [481]*481ADC’s office made an impression of his removable partial denture (“partial”), that he informed the assistant, that she told him it would pass through his system, and that the material lodged in his colon, causing an obstruction requiring emergency surgery. It is undisputed that Mr. Ricketts began experiencing severe abdominal pain three to four weeks after the dental visit and underwent emergency surgery to remove a bowel obstruction. The surgeon who performed the procedure described the material as a green rubbery substance about ten centimeters in length and one and two-tenths centimeters in circumference. The substance was identified as polyvinyl siloxane (“PVS”), most likely a product known as Aquasil Deca Heavy, a dental impression material primarily used for permanent crown and bridge work. The assistant testified that she used a water soluble material known as “alginate” to perform the impression. In granting ADC’s motion on Mr. Ricketts’s claims that ADC breached its duty to protect him from harm by failing to use a water soluble impression material and by failing to advise him of the need to seek immediate medical attention, the trial court concluded that Mr. Ricketts’s circumstantial evidence was insufficient to rebut ADC’s direct evidence that the material removed from his colon was not the same material as that which he ingested in ADC’s office. We disagree and reverse.

On appeal of a grant of summary judgment, the appellate court must determine whether the trial court erred in concluding that no genuine issue of material fact remains and that the moving party was entitled to judgment as a matter of law. This requires a de novo review of the evidence. Summary judgment is proper when the court, viewing all the facts and evidence and reasonable inferences from those facts in a light most favorable to the non-movant, concludes that the evidence does not create a triable issue as to each essential element of the case.1

Viewed most favorably to Mr. Ricketts, the record shows that on February 28,2002, he sought treatment for a painful loose tooth from William Ashley Moorman, D.M.D., the primary dentist in ADC’s office in Valdosta. Mr. Ricketts was eighty-two years old and had not been to a dentist in six years. Dr. Moorman deposed that Mr. Ricketts had severe periodontal disease and that the loose tooth was hanging out of the gum. After consultation, it was decided that Dr. Moorman would extract the tooth and add a tooth to Mr. Ricketts’s partial. First, [482]*482an impression would be taken. Dr. Moorman numbed the area around the loose tooth so that Mr. Ricketts would not experience pain while the impression was taken. According to Dr. Moorman, he instructed his assistant, Karen Kimbrough Eason, to take an alginate “pick-up” impression, called such because the impression is taken while the partial is in the patient’s mouth, and the partial is “picked up” in the impression. Dr. Moorman testified that alginate must be used instead of PVS because PVS is too rigid and either the impression or the partial would be destroyed when removed from the patient’s mouth. In any event, Dr. Moorman left Mr. Ricketts alone with Eason, and she took the impression.

Mr. Ricketts deposed that when Eason began the procedure, his mouth overflowed with the material, and he pointed to his throat to indicate that he was swallowing it. When he finally was able to speak, he told Eason that he had swallowed it, and she said, “No problem____ This stuff will pass through you.” Mr. Ricketts testified that the material had set so hard that Eason had to call Dr. Moorman back in to pry it out of his mouth. On March 25, 2002, Mr. Ricketts suffered severe abdominal pain caused by a bowel obstruction that had to be surgically removed.

Dr. Moorman denied having to remove the tray from Mr. Ricketts’s mouth and testified that he was never informed that Mr. Ricketts had swallowed impression material. He also testified that after the impression was removed, he extracted the loose tooth and sent the partial in the impression to the lab. Teeth were added to the partial. Mr. Ricketts returned the following week, and the other dentist in Dr. Moorman’s office seated it. Dr. Moorman was not aware of any problem until Mr. Ricketts’s son called to say that his father had been hospitalized. At Dr. Moorman’s request, the son brought him a sample of the material that had been removed from Mr. Ricketts, and Dr. Moorman sent it for analysis to Robert V. Hare, a research scientist at Dentsply Caulk, the manufacturer of Aquasil.

Hare, who invented various Aquasil products including Aquasil Deca Heavy and Aquasil Rigid, concluded that the material was most likely Aquasil Deca Heavy. Hare “guesstimated” that the product had been on the market since 1998. Hare testified that Aquasil Deca Heavy was developed to be used primarily as a crown and bridge material but could be used to take pick-up impressions. He explained that alginate impression materials are water soluble, while PVS-based materials, like Aquasil, are not. Hare further testified that the product is mixed and dispensed by a machine, typically located close to the patient’s chair. According to Eason and Dr. Moorman, PVS comes in two cylinders that are placed into an apparatus like a caulking gun.

[483]*483Dr. Moorman testified that he did not use Aquasil Deca Heavy, although his partner had tried it for a short time after Mr. Ricketts’s visit. Dr. Moorman also testified that alginate is a powder kept in a plastic bucket and that the impression material is made by mixing the powder with water by hand in a bowl. Mr. Ricketts testified that Eason mixed, or stirred, the material in a bowl. He did not see the material.

Eason, who graduated from a dental assistant program in 2001, worked at ADC for a year and a half, and left ADC’s employ in April 2003, testified that she used alginate to perform the impression. Eason explained that the water and powder are measured and mixed in a bowl, and that the material had to be put in the tray and in the patient’s mouth quickly because it “set up” fast. Eason testified that she never took an impression by herself other than an alginate impression. She further testified that alginate was kept in the lab, while PVS material was kept in the supply closet. Eason denied that Mr. Ricketts told her he had swallowed impression material. She testified that she had no difficulty removing the tray after the material set and that she did not call Dr. Moorman to assist her. Dr. Moorman testified that he takes all the impressions except for the alginates. He also testified that if Mr. Ricketts had informed him that he had swallowed impression material, he would have sent him to the emergency room for X-rays, even if the material was alginate.

Haskell Sewell, the dental technician who added teeth to Mr. Ricketts’s partial and examined the substance subsequently removed from his colon, provided an affidavit in which he stated that the partial was encased in an alginate material, not PVS, when he received it from ADC; that the material removed from Mr. Ricketts’s colon was not the same as the impression material that he received from ADC’s office; and that in the eight years he has performed work for Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
646 S.E.2d 705, 285 Ga. App. 480, 2007 Fulton County D. Rep. 1636, 2007 Ga. App. LEXIS 552, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ricketts-v-advanced-dental-care-llc-gactapp-2007.