Tedeton v. Coffman

544 So. 2d 35, 1989 La. App. LEXIS 868, 1989 WL 48902
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 10, 1989
DocketNo. 20,444-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 544 So. 2d 35 (Tedeton v. Coffman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tedeton v. Coffman, 544 So. 2d 35, 1989 La. App. LEXIS 868, 1989 WL 48902 (La. Ct. App. 1989).

Opinion

NORRIS, Judge.

The plaintiffs, Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Te-deton, sought damages for personal injury, emotional distress and loss of consortium as a result of alleged medical malpractice of the defendant, Dr. Leslie Coffman, a gynecologist and obstetrician. The plaintiffs contended that Dr. Coffman’s conduct fell below the standard of care for gynecologists because the total abdominal hysterectomy (“T.A.H.”) he performed on Mrs. Tedeton was not total and in fact left the cervix or a portion called the “cervical stump.” They also claimed Dr. Coffman committed malpractice by not informing them that the stump was still present. After a two-day bench trial, the court concluded that Dr. Coffman’s conduct did not fall beneath the applicable standard of care and rendered judgment rejecting the plaintiffs’ demands. Plaintiffs now appeal, urging the trial court erred in not finding substandard conduct. Unable to detect manifest error, we affirm.

Facts

Mrs. Tedeton first saw Dr. Coffman in June 1981 on referral from her urologist, who had treated her for a vaginal discharge. Mrs. Tedeton was also complaining of periods becoming irregular, of spotting and bleeding, of cystocele (leakage of urine into the vagina when she coughed), and hypertension. Dr. Coffman examined her and found in addition to vaginitis an enlarged and prolapsed uterus and bladder, plus a large, ulcerated cervix. He took a Pap smear which showed no infection. Dr. Coffman recommended a hysterectomy, but because Mrs. Tedeton weighed about a hundred pounds over her ideal body weight, he told her to consider dieting before any prospective surgery. She returned on July 1. Dr. Coffman examined her cervix under a colposcope (magnifier) and found nothing indicative of cancer. He performed cryosurgery on the ulcer, which he found was actually on ectropion, or tissue that was turned outward. The cervix was lacerated from obstetric injury and was partially everted (the inner tissue had moved outward). Dr. Coffman said this should not require surgery unless cancer was found.

Mrs. Tedeton next returned to Dr. Coff-man on August 31, not for a follow-up but for treatment of heavy bleeding. This had been occurring for some time; she was [37]*37passing large clots and Dr. Coffman considered it potentially serious. He had her admitted to Glenwood Regional Medical Center in West Monroe. According to his notes, he scheduled her for a D & C (dilatation and curettage) but she requested the T.A.H. instead, as she was not inclined to diet and she wanted to get the problem solved all at once. According to Mrs. Tede-ton, the doctor recommended a T.A.H. with salpingo-oophorectomy (removal of the uterine tubes and ovaries) in order to avoid future monthly problems. At any rate he proceeded to surgery on September 1.

Dr. Coffman described the operation in some detail at trial; his operative report was also admitted. He testified that he chose the abdominal over the vaginal approach because of potential difficulties with her surgery and the amount of blood she had already lost. Once he was inside, her obesity made it hard for him to reach the surgical site. In fact, in a T.A.H. the surgeon cannot see the cervix; he must operate by “feel.” Dr. Coffman discovered the uterus was retroverted and the ovaries full of adhesions. He therefore elevated the uterus and cut the adhesions. The enlarged uterus had adenomyosis, or in-growth of the uterine lining through the uterine wall, and endometrial hyperplasia, or abnormal thickening of the uterine lining. These were causing internal bleeding and could be treated only by hysterectomy. When he went to clip the ligaments he had difficulty because the “planes” separating the uterus from the bladder were partially destroyed. He was concerned about cutting through the plane and severing the bladder, rectum or ureter. In order to dissect and remove the uterus and cervix he used the “intrafascial technique,” which involved creating a new “plane” within the pubicervical fascia and separating the tissue along that plane. Dr. Coffman explained that this was not a universal approach, but it was his preferred method in cases like Mrs. Tedeton’s. He noted she was losing a lot of blood, so he postponed other contemplated repair work and physically removed the uterus and its attached cervix. He sent it to pathology for evaluation, feeling he had removed the entire uterus with its attached cervix. He acknowledged leaving at the top of the vagina some cervical columnar tissue that extended beyond the cervix itself and into the vaginal fornices; removing this would have required a wide-cuff vaginectomy. He stated that he did remove the bulk of the cervix and the cervical canal. Afterward he sutured together the top of the vagina, checked for bleeding, closed the peritoneum and then closed the wound in multiple layers. His operative report states that blood loss was about 800 c.c.; he testified that normal loss would be about 250 c.c. He concluded his report, “No known complications were encountered,” though he testified that he reserved the intrafascial technique for difficult surgeries and that Mrs. Tedeton’s was not a “perfect” situation.

Mrs. Tedeton stayed in the hospital for a week. The only undesirable symptom was post-operative fever. On her next office visit, September 8, she had fever which Dr. Coffman treated with antibiotics. By the next day her temperature was normal. On her next visit, September 14, she complained about a headache and blood clots passing through her vagina. Dr. Coffman said some bleeding was normal while the sutures melted and separated. On her next visit, September 23, she had no complaints and no bleeding. She scheduled a follow-up visit for three weeks hence but did not keep it. Dr. Coffman’s records show he performed visual exams on September 8 and 23. Both Mr. and Mrs. Tede-ton testified that sometime after the surgery, Dr. Coffman took them into his office, showed them an anatomy chart on the wall, pointed out the reproductive organs (including the cervix) and said these were totally removed from Mrs. Tedeton’s body. On questioning by the court, Dr. Coffman said he did not recall this incident; his usual practice was to show patients a chart in a spiral-bound book before surgery. He stated, however, that he thought he had removed the entire cervix, and this was his position.

Mrs. Tedeton paid a final visit to Dr. Coffman on November 30, 1981. Her com[38]*38plaint was hot flashes, which are common after the ovaries are removed. He gave her an estrogen injection and some pills. He examined her, noting that while the incision was healed, the vagina was not. He did not see any cervix, but testified that if he had seen her later he may have noticed it. Mrs. Tedeton never returned to Dr. Coffman, though his office called her several times between December 1981 and August 1982.

For some time after the operation Mrs. Tedeton thought everything was fine. She had, however, a recurrence of vaginal discharge so she went to see Dr. George Vari-no, the Ob-Gyn whom she had used from 1954 until 1973. Dr. Varino examined her on June 15, 1982, and said he thought he saw “cervix of uterus.” He got copies of the records from Glenwood and found they conflicted with his observation. This news affected Mrs. Tedeton badly; she went to several other doctors for their opinion. Dr. Ronald Anders in Ruston found what he assumed to be a cervical stump; Dr. Charles McFatter in Vicksburg found a mass at the top of the vagina and assumed it was cervix; Dr. Clyde Elliott in West Monroe saw “vagina clear, questionable uterus.” By the time of trial, Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
544 So. 2d 35, 1989 La. App. LEXIS 868, 1989 WL 48902, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tedeton-v-coffman-lactapp-1989.