![]() |
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | |
England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Lane v Worcestershire Acute Hospitals NHS Trust & Anor [2017] EWHC 1900 (QB) (24 July 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2017/1900.html Cite as: [2017] EWHC 1900 (QB) |
[New search] [Printable PDF version] [Help]
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
BIRMINGHAM DISTRICT REGISTRY
B e f o r e :
SITTING AS A DEPUTY HIGH COURT JUDGE
____________________
SUZANNE LANE |
Claimant |
|
- and - |
||
(1) WORCESTERSHIRE ACUTE HOSPITALS NHS TRUST (2) UNIVERSITY HOSPITALS BIRMINGHAM NHS FOUNDATION TRUST |
Defendants |
____________________
Mr John Coughlan (instructed by Bevan Brittan LLP) for the Defendants
Hearing dates: 16, 17, 18 & 19 January, 4 & 5 April and 5 May 2017
Judgment provided in draft: 15 June 2017
Judgment handed down: 24 July 2017
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
MR EDWARD PEPPERALL QC:
4.1 First, Mrs Lane alleges that the advice given by the cardiology registrar at the QE at 02:30 on 2 October 2010 was negligent.
4.2 Secondly, she alleges that Mr Nicholl was negligent in not taking her to theatre at 12:40 on 2 October and in delaying surgery until 21:00.
4.3 Thirdly, she alleges that Mr Nicholl was negligent in not carrying out thrombectomy of the ulnar artery and completion angiography.
THE LAW
STANDARD OF CARE
"[A doctor] is not guilty of negligence if he has acted in accordance with a practice accepted as proper by a responsible body of medical men skilled in that particular art … Putting it the other way round, a man is not negligent, if he is acting in accordance with such a practice, merely because there is a body of opinion who would take a contrary view."
"… a judge's 'preference' for one body of distinguished professional opinion to another also professionally distinguished is not sufficient to establish negligence in a practitioner whose actions have received the seal of approval of those whose opinions, truthfully expressed, honestly held, were not preferred. If this was the real reason for the judge's finding, he erred in law even though elsewhere in his judgment he stated the law correctly. For in the realm of diagnosis and treatment, negligence is not established by preferring one respectable body of professional opinion to another. Failure to exercise the ordinary skill of a doctor (in the appropriate speciality, if he be a specialist) is necessary."
"the court is not bound to hold that a defendant doctor escapes liability for negligent treatment or diagnosis just because he leads evidence from a number of medical experts who are genuinely of opinion that the defendant's treatment or diagnosis accorded with sound medical practice."
"The use of these adjectives – responsible, reasonable and respectable – all show that the court has to be satisfied that the exponents of the body of opinion relied upon can demonstrate that such opinion has a logical basis."
"(vi) Responsible/competent/respectable: In Bolitho Lord Browne-Wilkinson cited each of these three adjectives as relevant to the exercise of assessment of an expert opinion. The judge appeared to treat these as relevant to whether the opinion was 'logical'. It seems to me that whilst they may be relevant to whether an opinion is 'logical' they may not be determinative of that issue. A highly responsible and competent expert of the highest degree of respectability may, nonetheless, proffer a conclusion that a court does not accept, ultimately, as 'logical'. Nonetheless these are material considerations …
"vii) Logic/reasonableness: By far and away the most important consideration is the logic of the expert opinion tendered. A judge should not simply accept an expert opinion; it should be tested both against the other evidence tendered during the course of a trial, and, against its internal consistency."
"… in cases involving … the weighing of risks against benefits, the judge before accepting a body of opinion as being responsible, reasonable or respectable, will need to be satisfied that, in forming their views, the experts have directed their minds to the question of comparative risks and benefits and have reached a defensible conclusion on the matter."
"In the vast majority of cases the fact that distinguished experts in the field are of a particular opinion will demonstrate the reasonableness of that opinion. In particular, where there are questions of assessment of the relative risks and benefits of adopting a particular medical practice, a reasonable view necessarily presupposes that the relative risks and benefits have been weighed by the experts in forming their opinions. But if, in a rare case, it can be demonstrated that the professional opinion is not capable of withstanding logical analysis, the judge is entitled to hold that the body of opinion is not reasonable or responsible.
"I emphasise that in my view it will very seldom be right for a judge to reach the conclusion that views genuinely held by a competent medical expert are unreasonable. The assessment of medical risks and benefits is a matter of clinical judgment which a judge would not normally be able to make without expert evidence. As the quotation from Lord Scarman [in Maynard] makes clear, it would be wrong to allow such assessment to deteriorate into seeking to persuade the judge to prefer one of two views both of which are capable of being logically supported. It is only where a judge can be satisfied that the body of expert opinion cannot be logically supported at all that such opinion will not provide the benchmark by reference to which the defendant's conduct falls to be assessed."
"I must not, therefore, reject Dr Foria's view unless I am persuaded that it does not hold water, in the senses discussed in Lord Browne-Wilkinson's speech in Bolitho and developed in other cases: that is to say, if it is untenable in logic or otherwise flawed in some manner rendering its conclusion indefensible and impermissible."
SPECIALIST TREATMENT
"it would be a false step to subordinate the legitimate expectation of the patient that he will receive from each person concerned with his care a degree of skill appropriate to the task which he undertakes, to an understandable wish to minimise the psychological and financial pressures on hard-pressed young doctors."
CAUSATION
26.1 If so, Mrs Lane will have proved her case on causation and can recover damages even if there were other additional non-negligent causes of amputation.
26.2 Equally, if, on the balance of probabilities, the arm would still have been amputated because of the non-tortious causes and without the negligent management then Mrs Lane will have failed to establish liability.
THE EVIDENCE
28.1 Dr Dzifa Abban was a consultant cardiologist who saw Mrs Lane at the Alexandra during the morning of 1 October 2010.
28.2 Dr Donna Best was then a second-year core trainee in Acute Internal Medicine. She was working as on-call medic at the Alexandra when she saw Mrs Lane at 23:30 on 1 October and again at around 00:40 on 2 October.
28.3 Dr Chris Dobson was then a final-year specialist registrar in General Internal Medicine and Gastroenterology but has since been appointed as a consultant gastroenterologist in Truro. He was working as the on-call medical registrar at the Alexandra when he saw Mrs Lane at 02:30 on 2 October and diagnosed ischaemia.
29.1 Dr Yogesh Raja was then a final-year specialist cardiological registrar but has since been appointed as a consultant interventional cardiologist in Sunderland. He was working on-call at the QE during the night of 1-2 October when he was consulted by the doctors at the Alexandra.
29.2 Dr (now Professor) Russell Smith is a consultant cardiologist. He remains in clinical practice but has since been appointed to an honorary chair in cardiology. He was the consultant responsible for Mrs Lane's coronary care upon her transfer back to the QE on 2 October.
29.3 Mr Kai Leong was then an ST8 specialist registrar in general surgery. He has since completed his surgical training and currently works as a post-CCT fellow. He was the first surgeon to see Mrs Lane upon her transfer back to the QE.
29.4 Mr Phil Nicholl is a consultant vascular surgeon. As already recounted, he carried out the thrombectomy at around 21:15 on 2 October.
30.1 The Claimant's expert, Dr John Caplin, is a consultant interventional cardiologist. He qualified in 1976 and has been a consultant cardiologist since 1990. He retired from NHS practice in 2012 but continues to see patients on a private basis in Hull in addition to his medico-legal practice. As an experienced interventional cardiologist, Dr Caplin has significant experience of carrying out the PCI procedure for acute myocardial infarctions.
30.2 The Defendants' expert, Dr Tim Cripps, is a consultant cardiologist and former Lead Doctor at the Bristol Heart Institute. He qualified in 1980 and has been a consultant cardiologist since 1994. He has a broad cardiological practice but a particular interest in electrophysiology (heart rhythm disorders).
31.1 The Claimant's expert, Dr Basil Matta, is a consultant in anaesthesia and neuro-critical care at Addenbrooke's Hospital in Cambridge and an associate lecturer at Cambridge University. He has been a consultant since 1996 and is past President of both the Neuroanaesthesia Society of Great Britain & Ireland and the International Society of Neurosurgical Anaesthesiology & Critical Care. He is widely published on neuroanaesthesia.
31.2 The Defendants' expert, Dr Andrew Mortimer, is a consultant in anaesthesia, critical care and acute pain management at the University Hospital of South Manchester. He qualified in 1973 and has been a consultant since 1987. He is a former elected member of the Council of the Royal College of Anaesthetists and the Chairman of the North West Region Speciality Committee in Anaesthesia.
32.1 The Claimant's expert, Mr Jack Collin, qualified in 1968. He is a professorial fellow at Trinity College, Oxford and was a consultant vascular surgeon at Oxford's John Radcliffe Hospital between 1980 and 2010. He has been widely published across a broad range of surgical issues. Much of his career has been academic and general surgical, but increasingly he gravitated towards clinical work and a specialism in vascular surgery.
32.2 The Defendants' expert, Professor Jonathan Beard, qualified in 1979 and has been a consultant vascular surgeon at Sheffield Teaching Hospitals since 1990. He is an honorary professor of surgical education at the University of Sheffield and is widely published on vascular surgery.
ISSUE 1: DELAYED TRANSFER
THE ORIGINAL INFARCTION
38.1 Drs Caplin and Cripps agreed, and I find, that the ECG taken before the rescue angioplasty showed ST elevation of 7 mm in the inferior leads and that this was a significant myocardial infarction. Dr Cripps described the ECG as "horrible" and vividly explained the seriousness of the ECG findings which, he said, cardiologists would describe as "tombstone ST elevation."
38.2 I accept Dr Caplin's evidence that, while one would hope to see a reduction in ST elevation after a PCI, the ECG would often not return to normal immediately. Further he said, and I find, that the expectation was that the elevation would diminish over a few days of a successful intervention, but that any increased elevation would be a matter of concern.
38.3 I also accept Dr Cripps' evidence that this was a partially successful PCI. The distal end of the right coronary artery was still blocked and the ECG remained abnormal. While there might yet be further improvement, Dr Cripps observed, and I find, that these were not favourable markers.
38.4 The two experts agreed, and I accept, that the continuing ST elevation was a sign of damage having been caused, rather than of any continuing cardiac event.
1 OCTOBER 2010
46.1 Dr Caplin said that it was difficult to say whether it was an acute myocardial infarction or further evidence of coronary ischaemia. He made the point that, by contrast with the position on admission on 30th, Mrs Lane was not suffering chest pain. He agreed with the treating doctors that, at this stage, this was a case for conservative management.
46.2 Dr Cripps disagreed with Dr Caplin that there was any significance in the fact that Mrs Lane was not suffering chest pain whereas she had on 30th. In Dr Cripps' view, it was likely that Mrs Lane was suffering an extension of her myocardial infarction. In cross-examination, he did not distinguish between an extension and re-infarction. He agreed that it was almost impossible to differentiate between a further infarction and ischaemia, but said that the deterioration of Mrs Lane's condition and her subsequent drop in blood pressure indicated that this was an extension of the infarction and not just ischaemia.
2 OCTOBER: THE ALEXANDRA
50.1 Mrs Lane was bradycardic (i.e. her heart rate was unusually slow).
50.2 She was hypotensive. Systolic pressure (the maximum pressure exerted when the heart beats) was less than 100 mmHg; diastolic pressure (the minimum pressure between beats) was also low but Drs Caplin and Cripps explained that the systolic was more important in this situation.
50.3 Oxygen saturation levels had fallen below normal.
50.4 There was evidence of some ongoing cardiac event, as evidenced by the worsening ECG and by Mrs Lane's presentation as clammy and cold.
50.5 There was evidence of right arm ischaemia.
51.1 It was Dr Raja who had discussed Mrs Lane's case with Dr Best earlier in the night.
51.2 Dr Raja was working on-call at the QE until 09:00 on 2 October.
51.3 There would have been only one cardiological registrar on-call at the QE that night.
"Suggests ... intravascular volume. If still ( pulse then for CTA here"
THE CASE FOR TRANSFER
The cardiological evidence
"It is unreasonable to argue that there was a concern of 'life over limb.' Mrs Lane was not in chest pain and she remained haemodynamically stable, and the potential risk to Mrs Lane's limb which subsequently occurred, should have been considered in any risk vs. benefit analysis."
"In my opinion a reasonable body of opinion would agree, in view of the diagnosis of right ventricular infarction, with treatment for a few hours until the morning with intravenous fluids in the hope that improved blood pressure would restore flow to the arm."
The anaesthetic evidence
"Dr Matta is of the opinion that Mrs Lane could have been transferred if the decision was for her to have surgery. If needed, she could have had supportive treatments such as pacing wire (or external pacing pads), inotropes and even ventilation (if she was hypoxic). There are always risks to transferring patients, but on balance, the risk of further limb ischaemia outweighed any potential risk of the transfer."
"Dr Mortimer is of the opinion that Mrs Lane was not sufficiently stable, but if she had been supported with [a] pacing wire (or external pacing pads), inotropes and even ventilation (if necessary) she could have been transferred. However, this would have converted her nursing care from level 1 (ward based) to level 3 (critical care) and the need for an intensive care bed."
The vascular evidence
Analysis
78.1 I reject the suggestion that Dr Caplin had inappropriately rushed to criticism of Dr Raja's advice to give a GTN infusion to Mrs Lane. Such infusion was contra-indicated in a patient with RVI and led the Claimant to plead the administration of the infusion as a central plank of the case at paras 24(a)-(f) of the original Particulars of Claim. In cross-examination, Dr Caplin explained that he had not originally had the drug charts and had assumed that the recommended GTN infusion had been given to Mrs Lane. In my judgment, it was not unreasonable to have assumed that the recommended GTN infusion had been administered and then to withdraw the allegation when it became clear that it had not.
78.2 I do not consider that the criticism that Dr Caplin had changed his position on the importance of hypotension when he learnt that the GTN infusion had not been given is made out on the papers before me.
78.3 I cannot properly assess Mr Coughlan's argument that Dr Caplin's late criticism of the fluid management (first raised about a fortnight before trial) was wrong in principle. Since I did not allow late re-amendment of the Particulars of Claim to plead a new case on the basis of inadequate fluid management, I have neither had the evidence nor the argument that would have been required to determine whether the allegation was sound.
78.4 I reject Mr Coughlan's alternative argument that, even if right, the fluid-management point should have been identified from the start. As to this, Dr Caplin said, and I accept, that he had only been alerted to the fluid charts by Mrs Lane's legal team shortly before the point was taken.
78.5 I am not in the slightest concerned by Dr Caplin's recitation of a form of words that was plainly derived from the Bolam and Bolitho cases. There can be no objection to counsel asking an expert to apply a particular legal test, and I am quite satisfied that the opinions expressed by Dr Caplin remained entirely his own.
78.6 I was not troubled by the modest errors made by Dr Caplin in quoting medical entries. Such errors did not, in my judgment, affect the substance of Dr Caplin's opinion.
78.7 I reject the suggestion that Dr Caplin fell into the trap of becoming an advocate in the Claimant's cause. Both counsel had robust exchanges in cross-examination with the other's cardiological and vascular witnesses and, like others, Dr Caplin firmly defended his own expert opinion.
78.8 I reject the criticism that Dr Caplin failed to offer a range of opinion. Dr Caplin confirmed that he understood that he was bound to offer a range of opinion where appropriate, but explained that there would not, in his view, be a range of opinion among interventional cardiologists in respect of the issues in this case. While I might, on analysis, reach a contrary conclusion, I accept that this was Dr Caplin's professional view.
79.1 I do not consider that Dr Cripps' particular expertise in electrophysiology undermined his expertise to give evidence in this case, or that I should favour Dr Caplin for his greater experience in interventional cardiology. Both men are enormously experienced consultant cardiologists and are very well qualified to give expert evidence on the relatively straightforward cardiac issues in this case.
79.2 In the absence of a documented diagnosis of RVI at the Alexandra, Dr Fox criticised Dr Cripps' assumption that the clinicians were treating RVI. Pressed on the point, Dr Cripps memorably suggested that some things are so obvious that they are not recorded by busy clinicians. For example, Dr Best recorded an increase in ST elevation. Dr Cripps explained that the implicit diagnosis, which would not need to be spelt out to be understood by medics, would be of an inferior myocardial infarction. Equally, the clinical manifestation of RVI is hypotension. That taken with the recorded fact that right-sided leads were being used on the ECG indicated, I accept, that the doctors probably realised that they were now dealing with RVI, even if they failed to record that conclusion.
79.3 I reject Dr Fox's complaint that Dr Cripps' approach to the RVI issue somehow undermined either his credibility or his respectability. Dr Cripps' position was rooted in the practical realities of note taking for the benefit of fellow medical professionals. He effectively reached the conclusion that I have reached after hearing Dr Dobson.
79.4 In any event, I do not consider that the specific criticism in respect of the unrecorded but implicit diagnosis of RVI gets the Claimant anywhere given that there is no pleaded allegation that the management of her cardiac condition at the Alexandra was negligent. Indeed, on the contrary, Dr Caplin accepted that increasing the intravascular volume was a reasonable treatment plan to stabilise Mrs Lane's condition, albeit that he maintained that she required immediate transfer.
79.5 I also reject the criticism that Dr Cripps wrongly inferred that the treatment at 02:30 was with a view to transfer. Again, Dr Cripps regarded this as obvious. Any doctor would know that an ischaemic limb would require surgery if blood flow was not restored by increasing intravascular volume and boosting the patient's blood pressure. In any event, Dr Cripps' inference was subsequently justified by Dr Dobson's evidence, which I accept, that his management was all about stabilising Mrs Lane for transfer.
79.6 I am not troubled by the suggested inconsistency between Dr Cripps' report, which indicated that Mrs Lane was suffering a re-infarction on 1 October, and his oral evidence in which he spoke about an extension of the original infarction. As to this, Dr Cripps said, and I accept, that re-infarction and an extension are used as synonyms in clinical practice, although it was more logical to talk of an extension.
79.7 Dr Cripps described the 02:30 treatment plan as having been formulated by both doctors. In cross-examination, he accepted that it was not documented that any plan had been jointly formulated. I do not, however, regard this as material since I find that Dr Dobson would not have followed a recommended treatment plan that he did not accept.
79.8 I reject the suggestion that Dr Cripps had based his opinion on a case that was not established by the evidence, namely that delay was justified because the Alexandra:
(a) was stabilising Mrs Lane for transfer;
(b) had put in place a treatment plan formulated by Dr Dobson; and
(c) was treating RVI.
I have dealt with each of these issues. Contrary to Dr Fox's argument, I have accepted that the plan at the Alexandra, formulated by Dr Raja and adopted by Dr Dobson, was to stabilise Mrs Lane for transfer (see para. 55 above). Further, intravascular volume was being increased in part to treat RVI (see paras 59-60 above). In any event, Dr Cripps responded, and I accept, that Mrs Lane needed fluids and was given them. Thereafter, Dr Cripps considered that it was reasonable to wait to see if her condition improved before arranging her transfer.
79.9 Further, I do not accept that Dr Cripps made unreasonable assumptions in favour of the defendant trusts or that his opinion was not balanced.
80.1 Surprisingly, Dr Caplin's report scarcely offered an opinion as to the evolution of what, in his oral evidence, he described as Mrs Lane's "precarious cardiac status." It was only during Dr Caplin's cross-examination that I learnt his views as to the severity of Mrs Lane's original heart attack and the seriousness of her on-going cardiac symptoms.
80.2 While in cross-examination, Dr Caplin conceded that Mrs Lane's haemodynamics were deranged, at para. 8 of his report he had described her as haemodynamically stable. Dr Caplin sought to explain that her condition was not changing rapidly and that she was not therefore unstable. If, however, his opinion was that her haemodynamics were stable albeit at a deranged level then it would have been better that he had explained that properly in his report. A simple statement of stability underplayed the seriousness of Mrs Lane's fragile health on 2 October 2010.
80.3 Again, it was only in cross-examination that Dr Caplin conceded that Mrs Lane had been in cardiogenic shock. This was a significant conclusion that ought to have featured in the written evidence of a cardiological expert, especially given that the treating clinicians recorded a diagnosis of cardiogenic shock and the issue had been discussed when Dr Cripps had referred to cardiogenic shock in the experts' joint discussions.
81.1 In the Joint Report, Dr Caplin had criticised the cardiological registrar at the QE for having expressed an opinion on transfer without having seen Mrs Lane. Such criticism had not been made in the original report and was rightly withdrawn in cross-examination.
81.2 At para. 14 of his report, Dr Caplin had criticised delay by the vascular surgeon. Such criticism was subsequently directed at the cardiologists in the Joint Report by his answers to questions 7, 9 and 10.
89.1 Mrs Lane was a seriously ill and unstable patient. Immediate transfer without attempting first to stabilise her condition therefore carried some risk of a downturn in her fragile cardiac condition and, even, death.
89.2 The fluid challenge prescribed might well have stabilised her blood pressure and, more generally, her cardiac status thereby reducing the risks of transfer.
89.3 Further, an improvement in blood pressure, had it been achieved, might well have helped to restore blood flow to the ischaemic arm.
89.4 While an ischaemic arm is a surgical emergency, I do not accept that Mrs Lane required immediate surgery, or at least surgery within 6 hours, without first seeking to stabilise her condition. Such rule of thumb may be appropriate in cases of lower-limb ischaemia, but it is clear from the vascular evidence that an ischaemic arm can be tolerated for somewhat longer without irreversible consequences.
ISSUE 2: DELAYED SURGERY
2 OCTOBER: 09:30-21:00
THE EXPERT EVIDENCE
The cardiological experts
The anaesthetic experts
"Dr Matta feels that she was stable, and supportive measures could have been instituted should she have deteriorated during the surgery.
Dr Mortimer feels that she was not sufficiently stable at the time, but if she had received sufficient support in the form of pacing wire, inotropes and even ventilation if necessary, she would have been able to undergo general anaesthesia.
The risk associated with general anaesthesia included worsening of her cardiac function as a result of the cardiac depressant effects of anaesthetic drugs."
The vascular experts
"I have seen no evidence to support the view that any resuscitative measures that were undertaken between 12:00 and 21:00 hours on 2nd October 2010 many any substantial difference to the ability of the Claimant to safely undergo the operation of thromboembolectomy under local anaesthesia."
"Given her medical problems I agree with his decision, because I do not think that she was fit for any form of vascular intervention around the time of her transfer back to [the QE]. Therefore it was reasonable for Mr Nicholl to defer revascularisation in the hope that her cardiac condition could be improved, on the basis of 'life before limb.' Therefore, I do not believe that the delay in her brachial embolectomy until the evening of 2 October 2010 represents a breach of duty."
135.1 Mr Collin reported:
"… embolectomy under local anaesthetic is a trivial systemic insult that is unlikely to affect the cardiac function of those with even the most severe cardiac disease. Whether the Claimant's cardiac function was likely to have been or was in fact substantially improved by cardiac intervention are matters of opinion for the cardiac specialists to provide and for the Court to decide. From the perspective of a vascular surgeon, embolectomy was probably no more or less safe when it was in fact performed than it would have been at any other time after the brachial artery occlusion occurred."
135.2 By contrast, Professor Beard reported:
"… this was a reasonable delay. Dr Smith inserted a pacing wire at 13:00 and left instructions that she required monitoring for a period of time until stable, then for further vascular review. At 14:45 inotrope infusions were commenced as she remained hypotensive and oliguric despite pacing and fluid resuscitation, but she remained in cardiogenic shock. The situation was discussed with the vascular registrar at 16:15 because the CCU staff were concerned about the worsening colour of her hand, and Mr Nicholl subsequently made the decision to take her to theatre once it became clear that her cardiac condition could not be improved. Brachial embolectomy is not a 'trivial procedure' because it carries a significant risk of adverse periprocedural events, including cardiac arrest. This is a particular risk at the time when an ischaemic limb is reperfused, because of the toxins that are washed out into the circulation. It would have been unwise, and possibly reckless, for a surgeon to remove an unstable patient from the coronary care unit, which was the best place to look after her, until the cardiologists were happy that her condition had been stabilised and optimised. To do otherwise risked the claimant's life, and would breach a general principle of treatment, which is 'life before limb.'"
ANALYSIS
ISSUE 3: THE STANDARD OF SURGERY
THE VASCULAR SURGERY
THE EXPERT EVIDENCE
152.1 First, a longitudinal arteriotomy would have provided better access.
152.2 Secondly, it was essential to have also cannulated the ulnar artery.
152.3 Thirdly, a patch suture should have been used in preference to direct suturing.
152.4 Fourthly, completion angiography should have been performed.
152.5 Fifthly, it was essential to perform a fasciotomy of the forearm and hand.
154.1 the failure to cannulate the ulnar artery, which he made plain fell below the standard expected of vascular surgeons in general; and
154.2 the failure to perform completion angiography, which he said would be expected from a teaching hospital such as the QE but not necessarily a district general hospital.
The ulnar artery
"We agree that the brachial artery was successfully cleared of thrombus. We agree that the radial artery was at the time of surgery cleared of thrombus. We agree that the thrombectomies performed secured some increase in the perfusion of the limb."
161.1 Mr Nicholl's record in his operation note that he had achieved a good down bleed (i.e. from the exposed brachial artery) and a good back bleed (i.e. from the radial artery);
161.2 Mr Nicholl's assertion in his statement (confirmed in his oral evidence) that the hand "pinked up" after the surgery; and
161.3 the nursing record at midnight of a normal capillary refill time in the right hand of 2 seconds.
Completion angiography
Fasciotomy
ANALYSING THE VASCULAR EVIDENCE
MR COLLIN
174.1 Mr Nicholl said as much without challenge.
174.2 In cross-examination, Mr Collin, confirmed that he had experience of only two or three in the upper limb in his entire career. In cross-examination, he didn't quarrel with Mr Coughlan's suggestion that the procedure was rare and accepted that there were sound anatomical reasons for the rarity in the arm compared to the leg.
174.3 Professor Beard reported that he had never performed fasciotomy for upper-limb ischaemia.
PROFESSOR BEARD
"You asked for my opinion with regard to breach of duty and causation in this case." [C2]
ISSUE 2: CONCLUSIONS
187.1 Mrs Lane remained extremely unwell. As Dr Bowater advised that evening, and Dr Caplin accepted, she was not out of danger.
187.2 Indeed, while that assessment could only be made prospectively, the fact that she subsequently went into asystolic arrest and remained in danger for some days itself indicates that the vascular team might well have got this judgment call right.
187.3 Even though the anaesthetists would have been content to offer a range of anaesthetic options, it was logical not to remove Mrs Lane from the Coronary Care Unit until everything possible had been done to stabilise her condition.
187.4 For reasons that I will explain more fully when looking at causation, it was logical to conclude that little could be done to reperfuse Mrs Lane's arm until her blood pressure could be stabilised.
ISSUE 3: THE SURGERY
The failure to cannulate the ulnar artery
190.1 First, it is logical that clearing one artery of thrombus is sufficient to restore blood flow to the hand.
190.2 Secondly, basic anatomy means that it is generally easier to cannulate the radial artery; it being larger and flowing straight on from the brachial artery.
190.3 Thirdly, performing a further procedure would have caused damage to the intima (lining) of an additional artery.
190.4 Fourthly, the basic principle of vascular surgery is to do the minimum necessary.
190.5 Fifthly, withdrawing the catheter and then introducing it into the ulnar artery risks causing damage to the arterial junction.
Completion angiogram
CAUSATION
THE EXPERT EVIDENCE
197.1 Long delay in surgery.
197.2 The occlusion of the brachial, radial and ulnar arteries.
197.3 The failure to perform the surgery competently.
197.4 The poor cardiac output.
197.5 The inadequacy of the collateral blood supply.
"[Professor Beard] agrees that the arm amputation was largely due to the delay in embolectomy but that an earlier embolectomy would not have been successful because her cardiogenic shock could not be reversed."
"On the balance of probability, this was due to the patient's continued poor cardiac output, hypotension and peripheral vasospasm caused by the inotropes required to treat her hypotension, rather than inadequate clearance of the thrombus or a failure to cannulate the ulnar artery at the time of the original embolectomy, as the Claimant's poor cardiac condition did not improve despite treatment. Therefore, on the balance of probability, even if the embolectomy had been done earlier in the day, the brachial and forearm arteries would have thrombosed again and the outcome would have been the same.
Another complication that probably contributed to re-thrombosis of the brachial and forearm arteries was [HIT]. This would have led to platelet aggregates forming in the damaged arteries of the right arm and hand."
204.1 First, the brachial artery remained clear.
204.2 Secondly, the ulnar artery had never been cleared and so did not re-thrombose.
204.3 Only the radial artery had re-thrombosed.
He accepted the correction, but observed that this was logical since the radial artery was more vulnerable to the effect of vasoconstrictors than the larger brachial artery.
"Re-thrombosis was mainly due to the patient's continued cardiogenic shock, compounded by other pro-thrombotic factors including the embolectomy itself, which damages the anti-thrombotic endothelial cell lining of the arteries, vasospasm caused by the need for inotrope support, and the development of [HIT]."
ANALYSIS
208.1 First, Mrs Lane suffered profound and sustained hypotension. This of itself carried a risk of embolisation.
208.2 Secondly, the inotropic drugs rightly prescribed in order to treat Mrs Lane's hypotension had a vasoconstrictor effect which necessarily inhibited blood flow to the peripheries.
210.1 Mrs Lane remained in cardiogenic shock with low systolic pressure.
210.2 The inotropes that were necessary to treat her cardiac condition had the effect of further reducing peripheral blood flow.
210.3 Mrs Lane was unfortunate to suffer from undiagnosed HIT, such that the heparin prescribed to treat her infarction actually had a thrombotic effect.
OUTCOME