Zirkle v. N.E. Ohio Med. Univ.

2025 Ohio 2173
CourtOhio Court of Claims
DecidedMay 28, 2025
Docket2023-00433JD
StatusPublished

This text of 2025 Ohio 2173 (Zirkle v. N.E. Ohio Med. Univ.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Zirkle v. N.E. Ohio Med. Univ., 2025 Ohio 2173 (Ohio Super. Ct. 2025).

Opinion

[Cite as Zirkle v. N.E. Ohio Med. Univ., 2025-Ohio-2173.]

IN THE COURT OF CLAIMS OF OHIO

DEXTER ZIRKLE Case No. 2023-00433JD

Plaintiff Magistrate Robert Van Schoyck

v. DECISION OF THE MAGISTRATE

NORTHEAST OHIO MEDICAL UNIVERSITY

Defendant

{¶1} Plaintiff brought this action alleging that he was injured from being exposed to an excessive amount of formaldehyde in a cadaver that defendant supplied to Kent State University, where he was enrolled in a Ph.D. program and worked as a teaching assistant. Plaintiff seeks relief under the Ohio Products Liability Act, R.C. 2307.71, et seq. The case proceeded to trial. As explained below, judgment is recommended for defendant.

Summary of Testimony {¶2} Plaintiff testified that in spring 2019 he was in the doctoral candidate phase of his Ph.D. program in biomedical sciences, having completed all his coursework and passed comprehensive exams, leaving him to work on his dissertation research and serve as a teaching assistant. Plaintiff described the course that he taught in the spring 2019 semester in the gross anatomy lab in Cunningham Hall at Kent State University, and how there were four cadavers in the lab that semester, one of which was assigned for use by him and his students; the other three were assigned to three other teaching assistants. Plaintiff explained that the cadavers used at Kent State University were supplied by defendant and were delivered early each semester, at which time he or another teaching assistant would help transport them from the loading dock to the gross anatomy lab; the cadavers arrived in zipped body bags and were placed on semi-stationary gurneys in the lab, and then a cover was placed over each gurney. Plaintiff stated that the cadavers were supplied primarily for use in the gross anatomy lab course; though he did not ask Case No. 2023-00433JD -2- DECISION

defendant for permission to conduct his own dissertation research on the cadaver in question, he understood that it could be used for that purpose so long as this did not interfere with its primary educational purpose. {¶3} There were 18 to 20 students in the gross anatomy lab course in the spring 2019 semester, and in a typical class plaintiff would perform some dissection and describe what he was doing, and then he would give the students relatively simple assignments to perform some dissection themselves, he stated. Plaintiff recounted that the students wore lab coats, latex or nitrile gloves, and protective eyewear, all of which were required under the course syllabus, which also provided that students could wear respirators for additional protection. (Defendant’s Exhibit H.) Plaintiff acknowledged that there is an inherent risk of chemical exposure when dissecting a cadaver, as the cadavers contain embalming chemicals that are known to cause respiratory irritation and other harm, and the syllabus warned of these risks. {¶4} At the beginning of the semester, plaintiff explained, he generally began the gross anatomy lab course by dissecting the head, followed by the upper limbs and back. Plaintiff testified that as the semester progressed, there came a point in March 2019 when the dissection moved to the thorax region and he observed that this cadaver contained more fluid than what he was used to seeing, but it did not concern him and he removed the fluid without incident. As plaintiff explained, the cadavers that he had worked with in the past contained varying amounts of fluid, typically in the thorax and abdomen, and the practice at Kent State University was to remove such fluid with paper towels so as to reduce the fumes given off by embalming chemicals and to allow the students to better see inside the cadaver. Every cadaver has anatomical variations and different amounts of fluid inside, plaintiff acknowledged. Plaintiff testified that the fluid he observed in March 2019 did not concern him. {¶5} On March 5, 2019, plaintiff emailed the professor to whom he reported—Dr. Brian Grafton—to provide an update about the status of the course and the dissection, including that in the most recent dissection there were “tons of fluid (I got us TONS of paper towels as a result) . . . .” (Defendant’s Exhibit I.) In another email to Dr. Grafton on April 2, 2019, plaintiff again provided an update, noting that he had gone to the lab the previous day “to prep and drain more fluid from my cadaver” and, apart from a couple of Case No. 2023-00433JD -3- DECISION

unrelated issues, the “lab is going well (just an overly filled-with-preservative cadaver).” (Defendant’s Exhibit J.) {¶6} Plaintiff testified that on or about April 14, 2019, he visited the lab both to prepare the cadaver for an upcoming class and to perform research on the cadaver for his dissertation. Plaintiff specified that he dissected the abdominal and pelvic region that day. Plaintiff stated that although he had observed higher than usual volumes of fluid in this cadaver and expected to find fluid in the abdominal cavity, he did not take any extra precautions. Upon opening the abdominal cavity, plaintiff recalled, he observed more fluid than he had seen before in the five or six cadavers with which he had previously worked. {¶7} Plaintiff estimated that he spent about five and a half hours dissecting the cadaver that day, which he characterized as a relatively long duration. Plaintiff stated that although he took some short breaks, for most of that time he was in close proximity to the cadaver, and he explained that, because of his height (6’ 5”), he sat down or bent down for some of that time. {¶8} For a while that day, plaintiff was aided by a colleague, Elliott Sommer, and the two of them worked together to remove fluid from the cadaver, plaintiff recalled. Plaintiff explained that they initially soaked up some of the fluid with paper towels, then plaintiff scooped fluid out with a cup before Sommer retrieved large syringes to draw out more fluid, all of which they placed in a biowaste container. Plaintiff felt that the fluid was embalming fluid based upon its texture, appearance, and smell, although he later stated that the smell was to be expected. In plaintiff’s opinion, the cadaver was “overfilled” with embalming fluid, although he admittedly had no embalming experience. {¶9} When he finished dissecting, plaintiff recalled, he closed the body bag and the cover atop the gurney and went to the washroom, where he removed his protective equipment and washed his hands with soap and water. Plaintiff testified that he began to have a burning sensation in his eyes and nasal area, and he discovered painful red rashes on his wrists in the area that had been exposed between his gloves and lab coat. {¶10} Over the next several days, plaintiff recalled, he developed a burning sensation in his throat and chest and felt like his airways were constricting. Plaintiff went to an urgent care facility about a week after the incident, by which time he had severe Case No. 2023-00433JD -4- DECISION

chest pain when inhaling, he stated. At this visit, plaintiff testified, he received a nebulizing treatment to open the airways and a prescription for five or six days’ worth of prednisone, a steroid medication. {¶11} Plaintiff testified that on April 29, 2019, he emailed Dr. Grafton to let him know about the matter, and the following day he emailed Mary Ann Raghanti, Professor and Chair of the Department of Anthropology, about the matter, and upon her recommendation he prepared an incident report. (Defendant’s Exhibits K, L.) {¶12} Despite his ongoing issues, plaintiff stated, he continued working with the cadaver and dissected the lower limbs.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2025 Ohio 2173, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zirkle-v-ne-ohio-med-univ-ohioctcl-2025.