Shirley v. Smith

933 P.2d 651, 261 Kan. 685, 1997 Kan. LEXIS 32
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedMarch 7, 1997
Docket72,538
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 933 P.2d 651 (Shirley v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shirley v. Smith, 933 P.2d 651, 261 Kan. 685, 1997 Kan. LEXIS 32 (kan 1997).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Allegrucci, J.:

In this medical malpractice case, the jury returned a verdict of $457,000 in favor of the plaintiff, Michelle Shirley. Dr. U. Duane Smith appealed. Shirley filed a cross-appeal, then abandoned it. The Court of Appeals reversed and remanded for a new trial. Shirley v. Smith, 22 Kan. App. 2d 424, 916 P.2d 730 (1996). Shirley filed a petition seeking review of the Court of *686 Appeals’ decision on damages and inadmissibility of evidence of the Board of Healing Arts’ (BOHA) public censure of Dr. Smith. On July 11, 1996, this court granted Shirley’s petition for review.

Shirley raises two issues on appeal: (1) whether her claim for loss of time spent self-catheterizing is economic or noneconomic damages, and (2) whether evidence of the BOHA proceedings against Dr. Smith is admissible.

On April 16, 1991, Dr. Kepka, a family physician in Ellsworth, Kansas, saw Shirley, who complained of abdominal pain. At that time, she was 17 years old and a junior in high school. Dr. Kepka had a blood sample drawn. Based on the low platelet count shown by the laboratory study, Dr. Kepka hospitalized Shirley the following day. He asked Dr. Smith to consult with him.

On April 18, Dr. Smith made three unsuccessful attempts to obtain a bone marrow specimen from Shirley’s iliac crest. Shirley testified that she felt pressure during the first attempt and electrical shock sensations during the second and third attempts. Immediately after the procedure, Shirley experienced lower back pain. After she had been taken back to her room and had gotten in bed, “the pain really hit.” She was given some pain medication, and then her legs were numb for about an hour.

On April 20, Dr. Kepka transferred Shirley to the hospital in Salina. Shirley was started on cortisone. Her platelet count increased each day. Although encouraged to do so by Dr. Anderson, Shirley adamantly refused to undergo another bone marrow aspiration.

While hospitalized in Salina, Shirley was pressing down on her lower abdomen to make her bladder empty and she complained that when she wiped her perineum it felt numb. Catheterization to check for urine left in die bladder after Shirley tried to empty it produced nearly a liter of urine.

Dr. Anderson looked to see where the needle sticks from Dr. Smith’s attempts to take a bone marrow specimen were located “with the idea there’s something wrong with the nerves to the bladder and to the perineum.” Dr. Anderson saw two marks, which she estimated to be V* inch and Vz inch from Shirley’s spine. An MRI scan done on April 25 showed blood outside the wrapping *687 around where the nerves descend from the spinal cord and blood within the spinal canal where the spinal fluid is and where the nerves come down from the spinal cord. Nerves pressed and/or irritated by blood do not function properly. Dr. Anderson testified that the most likely explanation for the blood being present was that the spinal canal had been punctured during the bone marrow aspiration procedure, either by the Novocaine needle or the bone marrow needle. Dr. Anderson testified that she had never encountered a case of a spontaneous spinal bleed occurring in the lower spine from a low platelet count.

Dr. Manguoglu, a neurosurgeon, was asked to consult when Dr. Anderson found blood in Shirley’s spinal canal. He noted two puncture marks “pretty much on the midline” of Shirley’s back. Dr. Manguoglu testified that the first “MRI scan showed extensive hemorrhage, intraspinal hemorrhage extending from the mid thoracic region all the way down basically to the tailbone.” He testified that within a reasonable degree of medical certainty Shirley’s bladder disfunction was permanent and resulted from the hemorrhage. In his opinion, the hemorrhage was caused by her spinal canal being punctured when the puncture marks visible on Shirley’s back were made. Dr. Manguoglu gave the opinion that “there was no other explanation why she should suddenly have paralysis and numbness and these complaints.” He testified that he had seen the puncture sites and that a patient may experience electrical shock-like sensations if a nerve at that level is touched during a spinal tap.

Dr. Romeiser, a urologist, saw Shirley at the request of Dr. Anderson. He was of the opinion that Shirley’s bladder disfunction was “due to the bleed from the bone marrow puncture.” He recommended that Shirley be placed on “intermittent self-catheterization, where she takes a catheter and empties her bladder every four hours to keep her bladder from- overfilling.” The' purpose of self-catheterization is to allow her to urinate while lessening the likelihood of urinary infection or damage to the kidneys or bladder.

By the end of May 1991, the amount of urine Shirley retained after emptying her bladder was, in Dr. Romeiser’s opinion, at a “tolerable ievel.” He asked her to stop the self-catheterization and *688 changed her antibiotic. Because she had to push on her bladder to urinate, Shirley was again required to intermittently self-catheterize after she had a splenectomy in July 1991.

At the request of Dr. Smith’s counsel, Dr. Weigel, a professor of surgery in the division of urology at the University of Kansas Medical Center, examined Shirley in October 1993. He performed “more sophisticated studies” than those used by Dr. Romeiser. He advised that Shirley resume self-catheterization in order to prevent progressive damage from straining “so severely” to empty her bladder. He recommended yearly sonograms to evaluate her kidneys and monitoring for infection. He also recommended that Shirley undergo a surgical procedure, called a pin-up procedure, to keep her from leaking urine when she is in certain positions or is active. According to Dr. Weigel, “[S]he probably would have to self-cafheterize after that. I doubt that she could void.”

Dr. Riffel, an internist who performs bone marrow aspirations as part of his practice, testified that based on descriptions of the procedure given by Dr. Smith and his assistants, no needle had penetrated Shirley’s spinal cord. Dr. Riffel assumed that the aspiration needle was inserted “about three inches to the right” of Shirley’s midline. He testified that it would be possible for a needle inserted within a half inch of midline to penetrate the spinal canal.

Another internist who performs bone marrow aspirations, Dr. Neubauer, testified that he would have inserted the needle approximately 2 inches from the spine. In his opinion, bone marrow aspiration attempts at 3 and 2Vz inches from the midline, where the testimony of Dr. Smith and his assistants placed the procedures on Shirley, would meet the standard of care. Dr. Neubauer testified, “Based upon [Dr. Smith’s] description of the procedure I don’t see how he could have got into the spinal canal.”

With regard to her condition at the time of trial, Shirley testified that she still had the problem with leaking urine. She wears a pad when engaging in physical activities. She avoids drinking fluids when she is away from home to cut down on leakage and to avoid having to self-catheterize.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
933 P.2d 651, 261 Kan. 685, 1997 Kan. LEXIS 32, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shirley-v-smith-kan-1997.