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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Smith v Southampton University Hospital NHS Trust [2007] EWCA Civ 387 (26 April 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2007/387.html Cite as: [2007] EWCA Civ 387 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM
Miss Recorder Davies QC
SITTING AS DEPUTY JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
HQ05X02043
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE WALL
and
LORD JUSTICE LEVESON
____________________
SMITH |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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SOUTHAMPTON UNIVERSITY HOSPITAL NHS TRUST |
Respondent |
____________________
WordWave International Ltd
A Merrill Communications Company
190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421 4040 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Martin Porter QC (instructed by Messrs Beachcroft Llp - Solicitors) for the Respondent
Hearing date : 13th March 2007
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Wall :
The appeal in outline
(1) failing to identify and preserve the obturator nerve on the right side instead tearing or transecting the nerve;
(2) failing properly to repair the damaged nerve and / or failing to request the assistance of a neuro surgeon in order to effect repair;
(3) damaging the left external iliac vein;
(4) over-sewing the vein before and instead of requesting the assistance of a vascular surgeon.
The damage to the right obturator nerve
During the pelvic lymphadenectomy on the right side, I removed the external iliac lymph nodes and the internal lymph nodes. I visualised the right obturator nerve but, unfortunately, while dissecting the obturator nodes, I tore the right obturator nerve. The distal end retracted. We sutured the proximal end to what we believed was the distal end although there was no certainty of opposing the ends correctly.
(I interpolate to point out that the word "visualise" in this context and when used subsequently is a term of art meaning "expose", so that it could be seen with the naked eye).
Request 2
Please confirm with the level of detail to be relied upon at the trial, a detailed description of how the damage to the claimant's right obturator nerve arose. By way of clarification, where in its course was the nerve torn or transected and how did it happen?
Response 2
The part of the obturator nerve which a gynaecologist would visualise during this procedure is located deeply within the obturator fossa, which is within the pelvis. It is situated in the vicinity of various vessels. It is surrounded by fat and lymphatic tissue containing the obturator nodes. As part of the surgical procedure which the claimant underwent (pelvic node dissection) it was necessary to remove the lymph nodes to achieve the best outcome for the claimant since it could be cancerous.
Having accessed the pelvic cavity, Mr. Nieto pushed the vessels laterally, visualising the mass of fat and lymphatic tissue around the obturator nerve. Gentle traction was applied in order to mobilise and remove this mass of tissue containing the fat and the obturator node and Mr. Nieto started to expose and visualise the obturator nerve.
Whilst he was trying to remove the obturator node which was contained within the fat and lymphatic tissue and which was attached to the obturator nerve, the obturator nerve broke in two. Mr. Nieto considers that he must have already damaged the obturator nerve and weakened it during the dissection for it to have broken in two under gentle traction.
Approximately 1 – 2 inches of obturator nerve is usually visible within the operating field. Mr. Nieto cannot recall precisely where along the 1 - 2 inches of exposed length of obturator nerve this damage occurred.
Mr. Nieto reserves the right to provide further information about how the damage occurred at the trial of this matter.
Question:
Can you be more specific about when you think the original damage occurred?
Mr. Nieto:
It must have been when I was looking for it, because if you are examining - the obturator nerve lies in between all the fat and the lymph nodes – then when you are doing the dissection to find the nerve, then the ones that you identify and visualise it, then I normally pick up the bunch of fat with the lymph nodes to put some traction and then allows you to separate it completely from the obturator nerve.. (sic)
Well, within this bunch of fat, the lymph nodes, you try to dissect in order to visualise the nerve, and I normally do the section – you normally do it with the scissors and once you have identified or seen a little bit of the nerve, then you can grab the fat bundle, put some gentle traction, and that helps you to finish the dissection of the nerve, of all the fatty tissues.
The deputy judge:
It helps you to what?
Mr. Nieto:
To complete the dissection from the nerve. Then although the obturator nerve is 2, 3mm in thickness, theoretically – this had never happened before or after, or since then – then (inaudible) construction, you will damage it. It would mean that I might have damaged it whilst looking for it enough to just be putting some gentle traction is enough to (inaudible), I think.
Mr. Moxon Browne:
Now "transect" means cut in two, does it not, with a sharp instrument?
Mr. Nieto:
Yes, it means cut.
Mr. Moxon Browne:
I think, having listened to you answering Mr. Porter just now, whatever else you did to the obturator nerve, you did not transect it? I do not think you know what you did do, but you did not transect it?
Mr. Nieto:
That's the problem, you see. I might have – well, I'm sure that I probably have done it at least partially while I was looking for it.
Mr. Moxon Browne:
You did not transect it with either scissors or a knife, did you?
Mr. Nieto:
No, but I might have cut it a bit, enough to weaken it.
Mr. Moxon Browne:
As I understand it, it happened in two stages. The first stage is when you are looking for it, as you described to Mr. Porter, you are placing gentle traction on it, and it maybe turned a little, and then later when you can see it, it turns again?
Mr. Nieto:
No, no. sorry. Maybe I didn't explain myself. To start with, it is when you have separated the vessels and you have brought the vessels to one side, then you start looking into the fatty tissue that contains the lymph nodes and the nerve, and normally you do that with a scissors (sic).
The deputy judge:
This is important and you have got to slow down, all right? You separate the vessels?
Mr. Nieto:
You separate the vessels to give you access to the fatty tissue contained in the fat, the lymph notes and the nerve, and then you try to visualise the nerve. Well, in my case, I normally do it with a scissors, until you identify a little bit of the nerve. Then what you do is you pull tension on the lymph glands and the fat, and that allows you to separate the nerve completely from the lymph nodes, and then you have a bundle of fatty tissue containing the glands in your hand and the nerve is left behind.
……. you push the vessels to one side and you identify the fatty tissue, and then with the scissors – because the assistant has already retracted the vessels – with the scissors you try to open the space to try to visualise the obturator nerve, and once you have identified the obturator nerve, then you pick up the fatty tissue containing the lymph glands and by putting a little bit of gentle traction on the fatty tissue, then you can separate the obturator.
Mr. Moxon Browne:
Yes, you have said that several times. I want to know how the first damage that you postulate occurred?
Mr. Nieto:
As I said, once you separate the vessels, normally with the scissors, you separate the fatty tissue to try to identify the nerve which is there.
Mr. Moxon Browne:
So you are saying that at that stage you what?
Mr. Nieto:
I might have damaged the nerve in some way.
Mr. Moxon Browne:
With what?
Mr Nieto:
With the scissors that I was using.
The deputy judge:
When you are applying the traction?
Mr. Nieto:
Before I apply the traction.
Mr. Moxon Browne:
Well, if the nerve was there to be damaged, you must have been able to see it?
Mr. Nieto:
No, not particularly, because it's surrounded with all the fatty tissue, which means that by the time you see it you already have to push the fatty tissue out of the way
Mr. Moxon Browne:
If you are working blind, you have to obviously be very, very careful?
Mr. Nieto:
And we are, and I am.
Mr. Moxon Browne:
Well, I think on this account you were not, because you cut it?
Mr. Nieto:
Absolutely, but as I said before, with several hundreds of them this is the only occasion that I have done, which means that my technique must be safe in general –
Mr. Moxon Browne:
I am not suggesting that you always make mistakes of this kind, but plainly on this occasion if you damaged it at a time when you could not see it, you must have been proceeding rather incautiously?
Mr. Nieto:
I cannot prove or disprove one way or another, but to say that I did it in the same way that I did (inaudible) of them.
Mr. Moxon Browne:
All right. So you are saying that the initial damage which you speculate must have happened, happened at a time when you were trying to visualise the nerve?
Mr. Nieto:
Yes.
Mr. Moxon Browne:
I think it follows from that that the damage must have occurred at a time when you could not see the nerve?
The deputy judge:
That is what he said, yes.
Mr. Moxon Browne:
I am going to suggest to you that if you bring your knife or scissors into contact with the nerve at a time you cannot see it, it is at least strongly suggestive that you are proceeding without proper caution.
Mr. Nieto: -
Indeed, but obviously we don't use a knife in that particular area, we use the scissors, and the scissors normally are closed, which means that the possibilities of causing any damage is basically very, very small indeed. It might have been that the tip of the scissors may be open just enough to cause.
Mr. Moxon Browne:
So I think you are agreeing with the proposition that if you are working, as it were, blind in order to visualise the nerve, you should keep your scissors shut, and you should not cause damage to the nerve? You have got to proceed very cautiously?
Mr. Nieto:
Yes.
Mr. Moxon Browne:
Thank you. And you say that for whatever reason you did not do that and your scissors were probably open and you did?
Mr. Nieto:
A little bit of the tip at the end, yes, just enough to sort of – not all the scissors, but just a very little bit open, yes.
Mr. Moxon Browne:
I think what you are describing is a want of care, are you not, on your part? You were momentarily careless?
Mr. Nieto:
As I said before, I don't think I was careless. It is just that I made a mistake on that particular occasion.
Mr. Moxon Browne:
Well, I think as a surgeon you would know whether or not, or you should know whether or not you have got your scissors open. But that is the explanation you put forward, that you inadvertently allowed your scissors to open at a time when they should have been shut, and you say that was a mistake?
Mr. Nieto:
Well, I assume that is the case. That's the only explanation.
Was there a case in negligence if the right obturator nerve was damaged in the manner described by Mr. Nieto? The evidence of the experts
If his speculation is right that the scissor blades were open, that sounds an entirely reasonable explanation for what happened, and that would be a regrettable lapse of surgical technique.
Mr. Moxon Browne
What would be a regrettable lapse of surgical technique?
Mr. Soutter
It would be, I believe, my lady a lapse of surgical technique to have the scissors, the point of the scissors, out of surgical, out of view, of the surgeon but the scissors opened and therefore capable of cutting structures like the nerve or veins and using the scissors to dissect the tissues when they are held in that position.
Mr. Moxon Browne:
When you teach and instruct and train in this particular operation, what do you teach as the correct technique for using the scissors to dissect? What is the generally accepted technique?
Mr. Soutter
My Lady, most surgeons will use the scissors to dissect the fat which contains the lymph nodes away from the blood vessels and the nerves, by inserting the closed scissors into the fat at a point where they believe the plane that they wish to enter can be found. Having inserted the closed scissors, the scissors are then opened in order to spread the tissues apart.
And, having opened the scissors, spread the tissues, the scissors are then withdrawn and closed under direct vision, when you can be confident that they will not cut another structure inadvertently (my emphasis).
Mr. Moxon Browne:
Is there any part of that process that you have described that you tend to emphasise particularly to your students or trainees?
Mr. Soutter:
My Lady, I always emphasise to my trainees the importance of not closing the scissors until they are clearly visible.
Mr. Porter: -
So we have, as part of a reasonable and standard procedure, open scissors within the patient's pelvis during the operation?
Mr. Soutter:
The scissors are open – are opened in the tissue that is being dissected, but they are removed before being closed under direct vision so that there is no risk of inadvertently closing them around a vital structure.
Mr. Porter:
Yes, but you see Mr. Nieto's speculation did not involve inadvertent closing of the scissors; it involved inadvertent contact of the open scissors with the nerve?
Mr. Soutter:
That, my Lady, is exactly the same in effect, whether he is closing the scissors over the nerve in this case, or whether he is using partially open scissors to assist his dissection. The very act of pushing through the fat with partly opened scissors runs the risk of dividing a nerve or a vessel, if one is in that position. (my emphasis)
Mr. Porter:
If you have open scissors there is inevitably some small risk that the blade will contact the nerve inadvertently. That is how this type of injury may occur without negligence?
Mr. Soutter:
That is how Mr Nieto believed this injury to occur. I regard that as sub-standard surgery. It is certainly not what I teach my own trainees, and I would censure them, if I may use that term – I would advise them strongly against using that, if they used that technique in my presence.
Did Mr. Monaghan disagree?
Mr. Porter:
Can I ask you whether it is or is not unusual to have exposed scissor blades in the vicinity of the obturator nerve?
Mr. Monaghan
I think I would agree entirely with Mr Soutter's comments that exposed scissor blades are a common part of our surgical practice and they really should be only exposed when fully visible to the operating surgeon.
Mr Porter:
Are they used in the way he described?
Mr. Monaghan
I would agree with Mr. Soutter entirely that separation is a better word (I interpolate – than "traction") and a more accurate word to use in the way that we utilise these things extensively throughout our dissection.
Mr. Porter:
We know that it is common ground between you and Mr. Soutter, because it is in the joint statement, that the occurrence of damage itself to the obturator nerve does not indicate sub-standard surgery?
Mr. Monaghan:
We are both of that opinion.
Mr. Porter:
Does in your opinion the contact of an implement with the nerve – inflicting that damage – demonstrate sub-standard surgery?
Mr. Monaghan:
I think we cannot say that it will always indicate sub-standard surgery.
Mr. Moxon Browne: -
Do you feel you know that happened in the course of Mr. Nieto's work?
Mr. Monaghan
I could not say absolutely categorically that I was certain of the exact mechanism that occurred in the damage to the obturator nerve. However, his supposition, and the reasons that he presents, would fit very well with my experience of the circumstances where I have seen similar events occurring. It is probably – the commonest reason why the obturator nerve is damage (sic) in that it does come into contact with an incompletely closed pair of scissors.
Mr. Moxon Browne
Yes, and scissors which are at the time moving together as opposed to apart?
Mr. Monaghan:
Well, I don't know whether we can say they were moving together or not. These scissors – I don't think anyone other than a surgeon would realise just how incredibly sharp that last millimetre of scissor can be, and it really doesn't need to be wide open. It is a tiny opening – this nerve is not circular, it is slightly elliptical – and to pick up the edge with the scissor, it would go through it.
Mr. Moxon Browne
No doubt that is why the great object of this form of surgery is to dissect that which needs to be dissected and to visualise and preserve that which needs to be preserved, and only to use open scissors when you can see the tips? It is common sense really.
Mr. Monaghan
It is.
Taking stock
The deputy judge's approach to the damage caused to the right obturator nerve
46. The difficulty which Mr. Monaghan identified is the anatomy. The material to be separated he likened to slightly firm tissue paper. It joins the nodes and the fat together and lies around vessels. The surgeon separates the tissue under vision, it is brought together, it is then necessary to cut it to release it to move on to the next stage of dissection. The difficult area is behind the vessels. There are times when you do cut without perfect vision. In such circumstances you do it extremely gently. In examination in chief and in cross-examination Mr. Monaghan stated that Mr. Nieto's accounts of what he assumed had taken place did not represent sub-standard surgery.
47. Mr Soutter and Mr. Monaghan were in court to hear Mr. Nieto's account of the procedure. The view which Mr. Monaghan expressed came from a surgeon who for many years ran the largest gynaecological unit in Britain, had been for nearly four years the national lead in gynaecological oncology and had been personally involved in over 1,500 cases of cancer. It was an opinion based upon years of relevant experience and knowledge of the difficulties of this operation.
Damage to the obturator nerve
60. Damage to this nerve is a recognised complication of a radical hysterectomy. The fact of such damage is not itself evidence of substandard care. No one can say with certainty how the damage occurred. Assumption and supposition were placed before the court, the likeliest explanation being relied upon was the one proffered by Mr. Nieto. One reason why no witness can be certain is the complexity of the human body. A fact recognised in the decision of Delaney v. Southmead Health Authority [1995] 6 Med LR 355. A further reason is the inherent difficulty of the procedure.
61. Taking the claimant's case at its highest and relying on the assumption proffered by Mr. Nieto that the tips of the scissors were open, Mr. Monaghan who saw and heard Mr. Nieto gave evidence, does not describe his account of his surgery as representing substandard surgery. It is a reflection of the difficulty of the anatomy and the problem it causes for the surgeon however careful he or she is. It was not suggested to Mr. Monaghan that he was anything other than knowledgeable, skilled and experienced in the field of gynaecology. His opinion was based upon experience of this procedure and the difficulties encountered by surgeons. It was an opinion to which weight has to be given and is.
62. In their closing submissions counsel on behalf of the claimant "restated" the test enunciated by McNair J in Bolam v. Friern Hospital Management Committee [1957] 2 All ER 118 for present purposes to be this: -
"A gyn-oncological surgeon is not guilty of negligence if he has performed the surgery with the degree of care accepted as appropriate by a responsible body of skilled gyn-oncological surgeons"
The nature of the Bolam test has always been its adaptability to reflect the particular skill of the doctor in question. No one has suggested that Mr. Monaghan does not represent the view of a responsible body of gyn-oncological surgeons. Accordingly the claimant has failed to satisfy the test for negligence in respect of damage to the right obturator nerve.
63. I have stated that I was taking the claimant's case at its highest and relying upon the assumption proffered by Mr. Nieto. I am bound to say that in an action for negligence to base such a finding on what is no more than assumption or supposition in respect of a recognised risk of the procedure would be bold and I believe unfair.
Discussion and conclusion on the damage to the right obturator nerve
The case against Mr. Boyd
Mr. Soutter is critical of the placing of the further 2 sutures and of the quality of the sutures. In his written reports he states that when it became apparent that the tear was still leaking it was clearly not appropriate to place 2-3 more sutures in the vein. The assistance of a vascular surgeon should have been sought. The bleeding from the vein should have been controlled by finger, thumb or clamp until such time as the vascular surgeon arrived. There is no dispute that it was the additional two stitches which caused the real constriction in
the vein and compromised the repair effort of Mr. Morris the vascular surgeon. Mr. Soutter criticises the placing of the sutures saying that a wide bite must have been taken to cause such a narrowing of the vein.
56. The decision to put in the extra stitches Mr. Monaghan described it as one that always presents surgical difficulty. The surgeon can put pressure on the vein and obliterate any flow of blood but is limited in the amount of time he can do that. The inevitable process would have been, put pressure on for a short time, look at it again and if it continued to bleed, see whether there was another manoeuvre that the surgeon could make. Mr. Monaghan said that to decide to add further stitches to the bleeding edges was an entirely reasonable decision for Mr. Boyd to take.
57. As to the quality of the stitching, Mr. Monaghan said that there is a need to take a good bite of the edges of any bleeding point. The bite has to be big enough for the strength of the vein to accept the pull that is necessary to draw the edges together. The result of this is that there is and was an inevitable folding of that part of the Z stitch, further narrowing the lumen of the vein. This was described by Mr. Monaghan as a worrying consequence of the technique which is "extraordinarily difficult" to avoid when achieving haemostasis but it does not indicate substandard stitching. Mr. Boyd having added two stitches examined the vein and the leg and realised at that point the venous drains from the leg were significantly compromised. The decision to then call Mr. Morris was described by Mr. Monaghan as entirely appropriate. Mr. Monaghan thought it unrealistic to expect Mr. Boyd to forecast the effects of the additional stitches in terms of stenosis of the vein. He said that stenosis is inevitable whichever stitch is used.
68. The fact that the vascular surgeons instructed as experts believe that one of their number could have effected a better repair does not get the claimant over the evidential hurdle created by Mr. Monaghan namely that it was appropriate for Mr. Boyd to proceed as he did. The fact of the stenosis, unfortunate as it is, does not represent substandard care in the placing and quality of the stitches. By reason of the evidence of Mr. Monaghan this aspect of the claim fails.
Disposal
Lord Justice Leveson:
Sir Mark Potter, P.