Case Law[2025] ZAWCHC 88South Africa
M.L v Van Der Merwe (5560/2019) [2025] ZAWCHC 88 (7 March 2025)
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## M.L v Van Der Merwe (5560/2019) [2025] ZAWCHC 88 (7 March 2025)
M.L v Van Der Merwe (5560/2019) [2025] ZAWCHC 88 (7 March 2025)
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sino date 7 March 2025
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
[EASTERN CIRCUIT LOCAL
DIVISON, WESTERN CAPE, GEORGE]
Case no: 5560/2019
(H
82/2018)
In the matter between:
M…
L…
Plaintiff
and
DR
FRANCOIS VILJOEN VAN DER MERWE
Defendant
JUDGMENT DELIVERED
(VIA EMAIL) ON 7 MARCH 2025
SHER J:
1.
The plaintiff claims damages from the
defendant, a specialist gynaecologist and obstetrician, following a
surgical procedure which
was performed laparoscopically on 19 April
2016, during which cystic masses around her ovaries were removed
together with her right
ovary. It is common cause that as a
consequence of the procedure she sustained a perforation in the dome
of her bladder, which
was repaired surgically on 4 May 2016. How the
perforation was caused and whether it was ascribable to any
negligence on the part
of the defendant are the issues that require
determination. By agreement between the parties the quantum of the
claim stands over
for later determination.
The
background
(i)
The
pleadings
2.
In her original particulars of claim the
plaintiff alleged that the defendant had breached an express
alternatively
implied,
alternatively
‘incorporated’ (sic) term of the agreement which the
parties had entered into, in terms of which he undertook to treat,
advise and attend to her health care needs with that standard of care
and professional proficiency as would be expected of a surgeon
in his
position.
3.
In the alternative the plaintiff sued on
the basis of a delictual claim founded on an alleged ‘duty of
care’ which the
defendant had, in similar terms, which he
allegedly breached in that he had been negligent in one or more
diverse ways, in his
use of a surgical instrument known as a LigaSure
Atlas, when separating and dissecting adhesions between loops of
bowel and the
plaintiff’s anterior abdominal wall. In this
regard it was alleged that the defendant failed to realise that the
instrument
should not have been used in the ‘prevailing
circumstances’ and in the proximity of ‘structures’
that could
be damaged by the heat generated by it, and failed to
foresee that its use could damage the plaintiff’s bladder. It
was further
alleged that the defendant had been negligent in failing
to remove a loop of bowel which he had separated, and in failing to
subsequently
assess the plaintiff and to act promptly, after she
complained of severe pain on 3 May 2016, and wrongly accepted the
diagnosis
(made by a casualty officer on her return admission to
hospital), that she was suffering from a spastic colon or
constipation.
Consequently, due to the aforesaid negligent and
wrongful conduct of the defendant, the plaintiff had sustained a
perforation of
her bladder which resulted in the leakage of urine
into her abdominal cavity, which had to be repaired surgically.
4.
As a result of these facts and
circumstances the plaintiff suffered pain and discomfort and was
unable to work for a period of 5
weeks and would be unable to work
for a further period of 3 months following future treatment which she
required; and therefore
had a claim for general damages, past and
future loss of earnings, and past and future medical expenses.
5.
Some 3 years after the issue of summons the
plaintiff amended her particulars of claim to allege that instead of
a LigaSure Atlas
the defendant had made use of a LigaSure Maryland
during the operation. In addition, the plaintiff amplified the
grounds of negligence
she relied upon
inter
alia
by averring that the defendant had
failed to identify or to ‘correctly’ identify the various
structures/organs from
which he attempted to separate the loop of
bowel, had failed to ensure that damage or injury was not caused to
her bladder in the
‘vicinity’ of where he used the
LigaSure, and had failed to appreciate that using it might cause an
injury that would
not be apparent or detectable and which could
result in avascular necrosis to the bladder and a leak into the
peritoneal cavity.
6.
The plaintiff further alleged that, given
the presence of several adhesions in her peritoneal cavity involving
her bowel, bladder,
vaginal vault and anterior abdominal wall, the
defendant had been negligent in failing to convert the laparoscopy to
a laparotomy
(an open surgical procedure performed by way of an
incision into the abdomen). Lastly, in her amended particulars of
claim the
plaintiff deleted her previous allegations that the
defendant had acted negligently by failing to remove the loop of
bowel which
he had separated, accepting the diagnosis which was made
by the casualty officer on her emergency admission on 3 May 2016, and
failing to act ‘promptly’ in respect thereof.
(ii)
The expert reports
7.
The plaintiff engaged two experts to assist
her: Dr Hendrik Cronje, a specialist gynaecologist and obstetrician
and retired professor
and head of the Department of Obstetrics and
Gynaecology at the University of the Free State, and Dr Bastiaan
Pienaar, a retired
former senior lecturer and head of the Colorectal,
HPB and Laparoscopic Surgery Unit at the University of Pretoria. The
defendant
in turn made use of the services of Dr Daniel Fölscher,
a practising specialist general surgeon with a particular interest
in
laparoscopic, thoracic and hernia surgery, and Dr Peter De Jong, a
practising specialist obstetrician and uro-gynaecologist.
8.
The plaintiff’s experts each filed 2
sets of expert reports: Dr Pienaar in March 2019 and July 2021, and
Prof Cronje in August
2019 and May 2022. In his first report Prof
Cronje pointed out that the laparoscopic removal of an ovary in a
patient who has had
a previous hysterectomy is a high-risk operation
for complications because, due to the previous surgery there are
often adhesions
present in the pelvis, which are formed during the
healing process and the formation of scar tissue, as a result of
which organs
such as the bowel may become stuck to other organs such
as the bladder, vagina and/or the ovaries, which are often tightly
adherent
to the pelvic sidewalls, and in separating these adhesions
an injury or damage to the organs involved is more likely during
laparoscopic
surgery than during ‘open’ surgery i.e.
during a laparotomy.
9.
Prof Cronje and Dr Pienaar were agreed that
the removal of the plaintiff’s right ovary was indicated, given
the large cystic
mass around it. In this regard it was evident from
the medical records which were introduced into evidence that in April
2016 the
plaintiff attended on a surgeon, Dr M Nel, with complaints
of chronic epigastric i.e. abdominal pain. An ultrasound scan which
was performed on 13 April 2016 reflected the presence of a large,
complex cystic mass measuring some 36 mm in diameter, and a smaller
simple cyst of 15 mm, around the right ovary, as well as a
thin-walled, single cyst of 17 mm around her left ovary, which
required
histological analysis, to rule out the presence of cancer.
The plaintiff was referred by Dr Nel to the defendant and he saw her
on the same day that the ultrasound was performed. In his report of
his consultation he noted that she was 52 years old at the
time, had
given birth twice via caesarean section and once by way of normal
delivery, and some 10 years earlier had undergone a
hysterectomy, at
which time her uterus had been removed but not her ovaries. The
defendant advised that both ovaries and the cysts
surrounding them
should be removed and sent for histological analysis, which advice
the plaintiff accepted, and she was admitted
by the defendant to the
Geneva Clinic in George, on 19 April 2016.
10.
In their first reports Prof Cronje and Dr
Pienaar noted that, from the file note which the defendant made on
the day of the operation
it was apparent that he had used a LigaSure
device to dissect adhesions, and to separate organs which were
adhered to one another
and the abdominal wall. Although he had not
specified the model he had used, from the photos which he produced
(which were taken
during the procedure) it seemed to them that it was
a LigaSure Atlas, a bipolar cautery instrument which they both
considered to
be wholly inappropriate for the purpose.
11.
Dr Pienaar was highly critical of the
defendant’s use of such a device, which has jaws which are 10
mm i.e. 1 cm wide, and
which is used during laparoscopic and
abdominal surgery to cauterize and seal blood vessels of up to 7 mm
in diameter. Sealing
occurs through thermal energy i.e. heat which is
generated in the jaws, which causes retrograde clotting and bonding
of the tissue
layers which have been gripped. Although the LigaSure
Atlas does have a cutting function as well, it is not designed for
use as
a general dissection device.
12.
Thus, in Dr Pienaar’s view, to
dissect the adhesions which the defendant encountered, particularly
the one involving a loop
of bowel that was adhered to the abdominal
wall, the defendant should have made use of ordinary scissors or a
cautery hook. Failing
this, the use of a LigaSure Maryland, which had
a smaller, 7 mm curved jaw and built-in scissors and could be used
for sharp dissection
in laparoscopies or open surgery, would have
been ‘more appropriate’, although extreme care should
have been exercised
when using it to dissect ‘thin-walled
structures’. In such instances only its scissor function should
have been activated
and not its cautery function.
13.
Consequently, in his view the use of a
LigaSure Atlas to dissect adhered small bowel loops from the
plaintiff’s anterior abdominal
wall or bladder dome was wrong.
In addition, it was the view of Dr Pienaar that the defendant should
not have left the loop of
bowel which he separated, in the abdominal
cavity, as it put the plaintiff at risk for an internal hernia in the
future.
14.
According to Prof Cronje, whilst the use of
a LigaSure Atlas was ‘fine’ for laparoscopic surgical
procedures involving
the removal of organs such as the uterus and
‘uncomplicated’ ovaries, unlike the smaller LigaSure
Maryland (which is
used both to dissect adhesions and seal blood
vessels) it was not the ‘ideal’ instrument to use in the
case of the
plaintiff, where the adhesions in her abdominal cavity
were close and tight, and there was minimal space between them and
the organs
they were stuck to. Using a LigaSure Atlas in such
circumstances would result in thermal damage to adjacent organs, such
as the
bladder.
15.
In his second report Dr Pienaar noted that
after they had received a set of further photographs from the
defendant it appeared that
he had in fact made use of a LigaSure
Maryland and not a LigaSure Atlas. However, this did not cause Dr
Pienaar to alter his original
opinion that the use of a
heat-generating sealing device such as a LigaSure, to dissect
adhesions of loops of small bowel from
the plaintiff’s anterior
abdominal wall, was inappropriate.
16.
In his second report Prof Cronje pointed
out that, unlike the LigaSure Atlas, the LigaSure Maryland cauterises
small blood vessels
within an adhesion whilst simultaneously
dissecting it. Contrary to Dr Pienaar, he was of the view that the
defendant could use
a LigaSure Maryland to separate the adhesions
between the plaintiff’s bowel and bladder and was correct in
making sure that,
when doing so he stayed away from the bowel.
However, unless he was sure that in doing so the bladder wall would
not be damaged
by the cauterisation process, he should not have
activated it.
17.
In his view, from the defendant’s
operation note of 19 April 2016 it seemed that in trying to avoid
damaging the bowel, which
was on one side of an adhesion (a bowel
perforation is a serious, potentially mortal complication as it
results in faecal contamination
of the abdominal cavity), when
dissecting it the defendant had moved the LigaSure ‘too close’
to the other side of
it and, in doing so, had ‘pulled’
the bladder wall into its jaws. As a result, the cauterisation which
was applied
extended into the bladder wall. The resultant damage
caused reduced vascular perfusion in the blood supply to the area
which, in
turn, led to a breakdown of tissue in the bladder wall,
which resulted in avascular necrosis, and a perforation in the
bladder.
18.
In addition, the fact that according to the
operation note of Dr Nel, who repaired the bladder, the perforation
was 3 cm long, indicated
that the defendant had probably clamped and
burnt the area concerned more than once. In this regard it seems, as
was later confirmed
in his evidence, that he based this assumption on
the fact that the LigaSure Maryland has a thermal spread of about
4.5-5mm across
its jaws and an additional lateral thermal spread of
1-2 mm on either side of them i.e. a thermal footprint of
approximately 8
mm, in total.
19.
As for the defendants’ experts, in
his first report of April 2019 Dr De Jong also assumed that a
LigaSure Atlas had been used,
but in his view, its use was ‘entirely
appropriate” for the type and scale of the operation, as its
lateral thermal
spread was less than 1 mm. There was therefore no
reason why it could not be used in bowel and bladder adhesion
dissection. In
his view, the use of other bipolar cautery devices
instead of a LigaSure would probably have hastened the necrosis which
occurred.
In this regard he agreed that the injury which plaintiff
sustained to her bladder was caused by avascular necrosis, following
a
reduction in vascular perfusion (blood supply) to an adjacent area
on the bladder wall, after cautery was applied during an
adhesiolysis.
20.
In his second report, which was filed in
November 2021, Dr De Jong confirmed (after considering the additional
documentation which
had been discovered by the defendant, including
further photographic images taken during the laparoscopy), that the
defendant had
used a LigaSure Maryland and not a LigaSure Atlas. He
was nonetheless of the view that the surgical technique which the
defendant
employed in using the LigaSure Maryland to dissect and
separate the adhesions which he encountered, had been appropriate and
reasonable.
The adhesion between the small bowel and the bladder
which he dissected was clearly identifiable and visible, and it
contained
a blood vessel which required sealing to avoid bleeding
after it was dissected. The safest instrument to use for this purpose
was
the LigaSure Maryland, as it had less thermal spread compared to
most other cautery devices and was an instrument that was designed,
and which was widely used, laparoscopically, in abdominal and pelvic
procedures, for dissecting adhesions and sealing blood vessels.
A
bipolar cautery device was not appropriate for such purposes as it
had a larger thermal footprint and would likely have caused
greater
thermal damage had it been used. Likewise, mono- or unipolar devices
also had a significant lateral thermal spread and
should consequently
not be used to dissect adhesions adherent to bowel. In fact,
according to Dr De Jong such devices have not
been used in pelvic
surgery for many years. Finally, Dr De Jong pointed out that
avascular necrosis was a complication that could
occur in the best of
hands, notwithstanding the employment of the best possible surgical
techniques.
21.
In his report Dr Fölscher pointed out
that, as a general surgeon with a special interest in laparoscopic
surgery, and as past
President of the SA Society for Endoscopic
Surgery, he had been involved in the development of training courses
in advanced laparoscopic
surgery for the SA Society of Obstetricians
and Gynaecologists, and had presented such courses for the Royal
College of Surgeons
in the UK. He had performed many laparoscopic
surgeries which required adhesiolysis in the pelvis and the abdomen.
22.
Dr Fölscher endorsed the views
expressed by Dr De Jong and agreed with his opinion that the
techniques which the defendant
employed whilst using the LigaSure
Maryland were appropriate and reasonable. He also agreed with Dr De
Jong’s view that though
there were several adhesions in the
plaintiff’s abdominal cavity, there was no need to convert the
laparoscopy to an open
procedure i.e. a laparotomy. He also supported
the view expressed by Dr De Jong that adhesiolysis in the abdominal
cavity during
a laparotomy can be more difficult due to decreased
visibility (when compared with the detailed, close-up visibility a
surgeon
has via a laparoscope during a laproscopy) and is more risky
for the patient as it can result in increased blood loss and a higher
incidence of repeat adhesions, wound infections and incisional
hernias. Dr Fölscher also endorsed Dr De Jong’s opinion
in
relation to the use of other cautery devices, all of which in his
view involved a greater risk of thermal damage.
(iii)
The joint minutes
23.
Three sets of joint minutes of the experts
were filed: the first, dated 23 October 2019, was a minute of a
teleconference which
was held between Prof Cronje and Dr De Jong, the
second was a minute of the meeting which was held on 19 March 2020
between both
of the plaintiff’s experts and Dr De Jong, and the
third, which was styled a ‘consensus document’, dated 28
July
2022, was a minute of the discussions which were held by all 4
experts, between 25 and 27 July 2022.
24.
The first minute recorded that the only
point of dissent between Prof Cronje and Dr De Jong (and Prof
Cronje’s ‘chief
point of concern’) was the use of a
10 mm LigaSure (i.e. a LigaSure Atlas), during the operation,
which Prof Cronje
felt was not appropriate as, according to the
literature it had a total thermal ‘spread’ of 11.35 mm,
and he was of
the view that the use of a ‘5 mm LigaSure’
(i.e. a LigaSure Maryland) would have been safer, as its thermal
damage
footprint was approximately 5.85 mm.
25.
The second minute contained a more
extensive and detailed note of various points which were covered by
the plaintiff’s experts
and Dr De Jong, who were all agreed
that, given that the leakage of urine from the bladder into the
abdominal cavity most likely
started a day or two before the
plaintiff’s re-admission on 3 May 2016, the perforation of her
bladder must have occurred
approximately 11 days after the
laparoscopy, as a result of avascular necrosis in an area on the dome
of the bladder. However,
notwithstanding that the experts were agreed
that the perforation occurred because of avascular necrosis (and
presumably because
of their continued assumption that a LigaSure
Atlas was used), the plaintiff’s experts expressed the view
that it would have
been ‘relatively easy’ for the
defendant to pull part of the bladder into its jaws, thereby causing
the damage which
occurred, whilst Dr De Jong disagreed, pointing out
that this was inconsistent with the conclusion that the bladder
damage occurred
11 days post-surgery, due to avascular necrosis. Dr
De Jong pointed out that if the bladder wall been pulled into the
jaws of the
LigaSure bladder damage and leakage would have been
‘immediate’.
26.
The third joint minute was compiled by the
4 experts to address, in point form, each of the grounds of
negligence set out in the
plaintiff’s amended particulars of
claim. The experts were by then all in agreement that a LigaSure
Maryland could be used
to separate and dissect the adhesions in the
abdominal cavity. However, the plaintiff’s experts still
maintained that it
was not used appropriately and, according to Prof
Cronje, since the perforation in the bladder was 3 cm i.e. ‘quite
large’,
a piece of the bladder must have been pulled into the
LigaSure’s jaws, whilst Dr Pienaar was of the view that, given
the
size of the perforation the defendant must have applied the
device more than once against the bladder, or the bladder was
‘partially
pulled’ into its jaws.
The evidence
27.
A total of 7 witnesses testified: 4 for the
plaintiff and 3 for the defendant. Prior to the commencement of
evidence the plaintiff
handed in 2 trial bundles that were to be
referred to by the parties. Bundle 1 (exhibit A) contained copies of
the
curricula vitae
and reports of the experts and the joint minutes which they compiled,
together with various documents that were drafted by the
defendant.
These included 1) the letter he sent to the referring doctor (Dr Nel)
on 13 April 2016, in which he set out a note of
his consultation with
the plaintiff and his advices to her 2) his file note dated 19 April
2016 which set out his report of what
transpired during the operation
which he performed on the plaintiff (a copy which was also bound in
the second bundle as exhibit
F), and 3) a second file note dated 5
May 2016 in which he set out a further report of the operation and of
the events which transpired
thereafter, including the plaintiff’s
admission on 3 May 2016 and the laparoscopic procedure which was
performed on her by
Dr Nel, which he attended.
28.
The second bundle (which was marked exhibit
B) contained copies of a series of 31 photographs which were
discovered by the defendant,
in batches, in November 2018 and
October-November 2020, to which were added a series of sketches which
Prof Cronje prepared for
use in evidence. These included 1) sketches
of transverse views of a ‘normal’ i.e. un-operated
anatomy of a female
pelvis and the ‘distorted’ anatomy of
one after abdominal and pelvic surgery involving so-called caesarean
sections
(or, as it is more properly known, Pfannenstiel incisions),
and a hysterectomy in which the uterus has been removed (exhibits
C1-C2,
a further marked set of which was also bound into bundle
2 as exhibits H1-H2); and 2) sketches depicting the position of the
adhesion between a loop of small bowel and the anterior abdominal
wall/peritoneum, which the defendant separated and dissected
(exhibits D1, D2 and E2) and 3) a sketch depicting the position of
the incisions which were made in the plaintiff’s abdomen
for
the placement of ports for the laparoscope and working instruments
(exhibit E1). Finally, a separate copy of the photograph
exhibit B14,
as marked during evidence to show the presence of the blood vessel
which the defendant ligated when performing the
adhesiolysis to
separate the loop of small bowel from the anterior abdominal wall,
was also bound into the bundle (as exhibit G).
(i)
The plaintiff and her husband
29.
In her evidence the plaintiff confirmed the
details of her medical history as recorded by the defendant. At the
time she consulted
him she was working as a teacher at a school in
George. The defendant informed her that she had cysts on both ovaries
which would
have to be removed and sent for histological analysis. As
she only had a limited amount of leave, she elected to have the
procedure
done on 19 April 2016 so that she could recuperate during
the school holiday. After the operation the defendant did not come to
examine or speak to her while she was in the ward, and did not inform
her what he had ‘found out’ during the operation.
He also
did not phone her to find out how she was doing while she was
recuperating at home.
30.
At the outset of her evidence in chief she
said that she did not start to ‘feel bad’ immediately
after the operation
and was only troubled by pain she had in her left
shoulder, which went away after a day or so. When she got home from
the hospital
she took to her bed to recuperate. But, contrary to her
earlier evidence, she then said that she did not feel at all well
after
she got home: she had ‘severe’ abdominal pain and
‘battled’ to urinate, and she started to vomit.
31.
Her symptoms ‘increased’, and
from the Saturday (30 April) she was in severe pain. She returned to
work on the Tuesday
(3 May). While she was in her classroom teaching,
she collapsed and was taken to hospital by ambulance. Dr Nel later
came to inform
her that an ultrasound had revealed the presence of
fluid in her abdomen, and he needed to assess what was causing it.
She was
booked in for a laparoscopy the following morning, 4 May
2016. While she was lying on the trolley outside the theatre the
defendant
arrived. She told him that she did not want him there, and
he left. While she was recuperating in the ward, after the operation,
the defendant came to her and told that he was sorry, as he might
have injured her bladder during the operation he performed on
her.
32.
In cross-examination it was pointed out to
the plaintiff that, contrary to her evidence on this aspect,
according to the hospital’s
records she had complained of
experiencing acute and severe pain on the morning she was admitted,
which she had said had started
the previous night. In response she
maintained that from the time she had been discharged from the
hospital she had not felt well
and had experienced pain, which had
increased,
33.
It was also put to her that, contrary to
her evidence the defendant had seen her while she was still in
hospital, prior to her discharge,
and had spoken to her. He had noted
from the medical records that she had passed urine and had
consequently directed that she be
discharged. Contrary to her earlier
evidence, she then conceded that this may have happened but still
denied that the defendant
had also phoned her a few days later, while
she was convalescing at home.
34.
In his evidence the plaintiff’s
husband said that whilst he was waiting outside theatre on 4 May 2016
the defendant emerged
and took him to his consulting room, where he
told him that the operation which he had performed on the plaintiff
had been ‘very
difficult’ as she had a lot of adhesions,
and he might have damaged her bladder, and he apologised for this.
(ii)
The defendant’s file notes
35.
Before setting out a synopsis of the
evidence which was tendered by the experts and the defendant, it will
be useful to set out
what the defendant said in his file notes of 19
April and 5 May 2016, which were accepted into evidence, insofar as
this pertains
to his conduct during the operation, and formed the
context and basis against which the experts expressed their
respective opinions.
In doing so I have translated excerpts of his
original (typed) notes, which were written in Afrikaans, into
English.
36.
In his principal file note of the
operation, dated 19 April 2016 (exhibit F), the defendant recorded
that after the plaintiff was
sedated and her bladder emptied she was
placed in a semi-lithotomic position (which was also referred to by
the experts as the
Trendelenburg position), a position in which the
operating table is inclined downwards so that the patient’s
legs and bent
knees are raised up, higher than her head. The
defendant then proceeded to make a sub-umbilical incision into her
abdomen, into
which a 10 mm wide trocar (a sharp-pointed cannula or
tube) was inserted, into which the laparoscope was placed. The
plaintiff’s
abdomen was then inflated with gas, to improve
visibility. (As I understand the evidence he gave on this, when
performing the laparoscopy
the defendant took up a position where his
view was at a downward angle of approximately 30°, towards the
plaintiff’s
feet).
37.
From his position he was able to see a
large cystic structure around the right ovary, which was tightly
adhered to the right pelvic
wall. There was a loop of small bowel
which was stuck to the anterior abdominal wall, because of the
previous Pfannenstiel incisions.
The defendant was unable to insert a
second trocar supra-pubically, because of the adhesions present in
the abdominal cavity, which
were in the way, so he first inserted a 5
mm trocar into the plaintiff’s right flank, to serve as a port
for the working
instruments. He then proceeded to use a LigaSure
Maryland and scissors to dislodge the loop of small bowel which was
adhered to
the plaintiff’s anterior abdominal wall. With a
combination of dissection (cutting) and cauterizing he was able to
dissect
the adhesion and to mobilise i.e. free the loop of bowel,
from the anterior abdominal wall. In doing so he was satisfied that
he
had not injured the bowel. He was then able to insert a 10 mm
trocar supra-pubically, into which he could insert a grasper (an
instrument used to grasp and pull), and was able to inspect the left
ovary. There was a cystic structure attached to the fallopian
tube
and the left ovary was adhered to the pelvic wall, but it had a
normal appearance.
38.
He then returned to the right ovary. Using
the LigaSure he was able to open the ‘broad’ (sic)
ligament and to cauterise
and dissect another pelvic ligament. He
opened the peritoneum (a thin lining or membrane in the abdomen which
covers many internal
organs) to check that the ureter (the tube
through which urine is conveyed from the kidney to the bladder) was
mobile i.e. not
adhered, before proceeding to free the right ovary.
As he was doing so the cyst round it ruptured. He was able to remove
the right
ovary. The raw area where it was removed was rinsed out.
There was no bleeding from the site where the ovary was removed.
39.
He then moved across to the left ovary.
There was another loop of small bowel which was adhered to the
anterior abdominal wall,
just under the umbilicus, which he left, as
it was not in his way. The descending colon/caecum was adhered to the
left ovary and
the cystic structure around it. With a combination of
sharp dissection and the LigaSure he was able to free the colon. In
doing
so he was likewise satisfied that it was not injured. There was
no bleeding in the area where the colon had been mobilised. He then
proceeded to free and remove the cystic structure around the left
ovary. After considering its position and normal appearance he
decided that the ovary should be left in place.
40.
After checking the raw areas again for
bleeding (there was none) he powdered them to achieve haemostasis
i.e. to arrest any possible
bleeding. The plaintiff’s bowel was
then deflated, and the trocars were removed from her abdomen. Her
bladder was emptied
of urine, which was ‘clear’ (i.e.
there were no traces of blood in it). The ports in the plaintiff’s
flanks were
then sutured, and after she regained consciousness, she
was returned to the ward and discharged the following day.
41.
In his supplementary report of the
operation (in his file note of 5 May 2016) the defendant said that
there were adhesions of the
small bowel and the anterior abdominal
wall as well as on the vaginal vault, at the bladder (‘by die
blaas’). He was
able to remove the loop of small bowel from the
vaginal vault by a combination of dissection (‘knip’) and
the LigaSure.
In doing so he was concerned about a possible injury to
the bowel as well as to the bladder, as they were tightly adhered to
one
another (‘heg aan mekaar verkleef’). After he removed
the loop of small bowel he was satisfied that it had not been
injured
and that the bladder was still ‘intact’, and then
proceeded to remove the (right) ovary.
42.
He saw the plaintiff the morning after the
operation. As she was doing well and had passed urine she was
discharged. He phoned her
2 days later while she was at home, and she
informed him that that she was doing well and was mobile, and her
bladder and bowel
were functioning well. On 3 May 2016 he was
contacted by Dr Isabel Van der Merwe from the Emergency Unit who
informed him that
the plaintiff had been re-admitted with symptoms of
abdominal pain, which were ascribed to a spastic colon and
constipation. Blood
tests were normal, and her urine was clear. When
the defendant later enquired, he was informed by the Emergency Unit
that the plaintiff
had been discharged. The following morning however
he was contacted by Dr Nel who informed him that after seeing her the
previous
day he had directed that the plaintiff should be kept
overnight and an ultrasound scan be done, which revealed the presence
of
a large volume of clear fluid in her abdomen. The defendant
discussed the ultrasound report with the radiologist. Although the
scan showed the presence of a large volume of fluid in the abdominal
cavity, the kidneys appeared to be normal and there was urine
in the
bladder. The defendant was consequently concerned that there was
possibly an injury to the ureter. After discussing the
matter with Dr
Nel they decided that a diagnostic laparoscopy should be performed
that afternoon.
43.
After the plaintiff was taken to theatre
and sedated, a catheter was inserted into her bladder and urine
drained from it. On insertion
of the laparoscope it was evident that
there was a large quantity of fluid in her abdominal cavity and there
was a ‘defect’
(‘defek’) in the dome of the
bladder, which was not ‘completely perforated’
(‘heeltemaal geperforeer’),
from which it was apparent,
after mobilization, that urine had leaked into the abdominal cavity.
According to the defendant the
perforation was at ‘exactly the
same place’ where he had freed the loop of small bowel. He
concluded that it was likely
that a superficial injury had occurred
during the procedure, which had deteriorated with the filling of the
bladder and had eventually
ruptured.
44.
Dr Nel then proceeded to suture the bladder
perforation. A suction drain was placed in the abdominal cavity and a
catheter was inserted
into the bladder, which was to remain in
situ
for 10 days post-op. Upon completion of the procedurethe procedure
the defendant found the plaintiff’s husband outside the
theatre
and took him to his consulting room where he explained what had
happened. The following day the defendant also discussed
the matter
with the plaintiff.
45.
What happened was an ‘unfortunate’
complication, which occurred because the defendant was ‘scared’
he would
damage the bowel and thus most likely did the opposite, by
causing a superficial injury to the bladder which, with filling,
eventually
ruptured.
46.
I now turn to the evidence of the experts
and the defendant.
(iii)
Professor Cronje
47.
It was evident, from Prof Cronje’s
impressive
curriculum vitae,
that he was a highly accomplished academic, specialist gynaecologist
and obstetrician. He was the single, principal or co-author
of some
48 articles in the field of obstetrics and gynaecology, published
between 1977 and 2011, and co-author of several textbooks.
He was the
first author of some 116 scientific presentations which were
delivered between 1971 and 2016. He performed the first
vaginal
hysteroscopy in SA in 1977 and thousands of gynaecological surgical
procedures. It was put to him that the diagnostic laparoscopic
procedures which he performed in the 1970s-1980s were very different
from those which are performed today, which are primarily
used for
surgical purposes. Although he conceded this and indicated that he
had not done much laparoscopic work since 2012, he
said that he still
regarded himself as experienced and knowledgeable in the field. He
pointed out that although he had retired
as an academic in 2011, he
had continued to work thereafter in the gynaecological field, doing
extensive prolapse surgery which
was frequently performed in
conjunction with laparoscopic procedures. Over his lifetime he had
participated in and witnessed many
laparoscopies. He had personally
used LigaSure devices on numerous occasions during laparoscopies and
open surgical procedures
and was very familiar with them.
48.
In commenting on the defendant’s
conduct Prof Cronje pointed out that when the defendant performed the
first adhesiolysis
(which was necessary for him to remove the
plaintiff’s right ovary), he had only been able to use a
LigaSure and scissors
to free the loop of small bowel, and could not
use a grasper, as there were only two ports in place, a 10 mm
one just below
the plaintiff’s umbilicus, through which the
laparoscope was inserted and a second, 5 mm one in her right flank,
through
which the LigaSure was inserted. Because of the congestion in
the abdominal cavity due to the adhesions around the right ovary the
defendant was unable to insert a second, 10 mm trocar
supra-pubically, through which a grasper could be used, before he
separated
the adhered loop of bowel. Prof Cronje said that if the
loop could have been pulled away with a grasper it would have been
much
easier for the LigaSure to have been applied in such a manner
that it was not ‘tightly’ up against the peritoneum, the
thin (less than 1 mm) membrane which lines the inner wall of the
abdominal and pelvic cavities.
49.
It was his view that, when trying to stay
away from the bowel while carrying out this adhesiolysis, and in
attempting to avoid damaging
it, the defendant must have applied the
LigaSure against the peritoneum. If the adhesion was short ‘one
could imagine’
that, when dissecting it, it ‘might almost
have been necessary’ for the defendant to push the LigaSure
against the
peritoneum. If he had then closed its jaws, a small part
of the bladder which was behind it, could have been pulled into them,
and it would thereby have been subjected to thermal damage when the
cautery function was activated, which would have extended ‘far
enough’ that it resulted in a perforation at a later stage.
This was because the tissue damage would have cut off or diminished
the blood supply to the area and it would gradually have died i.e. it
would have suffered avascular necrosis. In this regard Prof
Cronje
referred to a medical study which found that thermal damage can be
sustained even beyond the 2 mm lateral thermal spread
on either side
of a LigaSure Maryland’s jaws, up to a distance as far as 9 mm
away from it. In his view this is what transpired
in this matter. He
said that if one were to have regard for photograph B23 it was
evident that the LigaSure must have been applied
tightly against the
peritoneum during the performance of the adhesiolysis depicted on the
photograph, as there was a greyish-coloured,
blanched area visible,
which indicated that there was thermal damage to the tissue.
50.
As the defendant had made no mention of the
bladder in his first (principal) operation report of 19 April 2016
and only spoke of
the bowel, he had not considered the possibility of
the bladder being on the other side of the abdominal wall, behind the
peritoneum.
Had the defendant thought about the possibility of the
bladder being in that position, when performing the adhesiolysis
depicted
on photo B23, he would have taken measures to prevent damage
to it. According to the defendant’s second, supplementary
operation
note of 5 May 2016, the perforation which later manifested
itself was exactly behind the area of thermal damage which was
visible
on photo B23.
51.
Several difficulties arise from this
evidence. If one considers what the defendant said in his
supplementary operation note, it
is evident (from the second
paragraph thereof) that it dealt with a single adhesiolysis only i.e.
the first one which he performed
to free the right ovary, just before
he removed it. And this is inconsistent with Prof Cronje’s
evidence, which became common
cause, that the ovary which is visible
on the adhesiolysis which is depicted on photograph B23, is the
left
one, not the right one. It also was common cause that the bundle of
photographs (exhibits B1-B31) show that 2 adhesiolyses must
have been
performed: the first one at photograph B14 and the second at B23. It
was further common cause that the adhesiolysis which
the defendant
performed at photograph B23 followed the earlier one which he
performed at photograph B14. Thus, the adhesiolysis
which the
defendant referred to in his supplementary operation note must have
been the earlier one, at B14, not the one at B23.
52.
Prof Cronje confirmed that the sketches
which he had prepared (exhibits D1-D2 and E2) were aimed at depicting
the adhesiolysis which
the defendant performed at photo B23, because,
in his opinion, it was the one which resulted in the damage to the
plaintiff’s
bladder. In his view, given the number of
photographs that were taken in respect of this adhesiolysis, the
defendant ‘obviously’
wanted to show the ‘safety’
of the separation he performed during it, and this was the
‘important’ adhesiolysis
he dealt with, and not the one
that took place at photograph B14. According to Prof Cronje,
‘everything’ in the defendant’s
operation report of
19 April 2016 ‘fitted in’ with what was shown on
photograph B23, and he accordingly disputed the
defendant’s
contention that, as it was put to him, the damage must have been
caused while the adhesiolysis which is depicted
at photograph B14 was
being performed, and not during the adhesiolysis at B23, and that it
was ‘anatomically impossible’
for the damage to the dome
of the bladder to have occurred during the adhesiolysis at B23. In
answering questions on this aspect
during cross-examination Prof
Cronje became agitated and said that we were ‘wasting time’
as the ‘essence’
of the case pertained to the
adhesiolysis which was shown at photograph B23.
53.
In substantiating this he claimed that
there were certain aspects of the defendant’s case that were
not ‘logical’.
Thus, whereas the principal operation
report spoke of a second adhesion, between the large bowel/colon and
the left ovary, which
the defendant had ligated, on photograph B23 it
seemed as if the ovary was still attached to what appeared to be the
small bowel,
not the large one, and the pelvic sidewall. Of course,
the photograph depicts but one moment in time in the process
pertaining
to this adhesiolysis. However, contrary to this evidence,
when considering photograph B25 a short while later (which was part
of
the sequence of photographs depicting the adhesiolysis which is
shown at photograph B23), Prof Cronje said that the yellowish
structure
which was visible on the right-hand side of the photograph
looked like the large, and not the small, bowel.
54.
During his cross-examination it was pointed
out that in his evidence in chief he had seemed to suggest that the
damage to the plaintiff’s
bladder had been occasioned at the
outset of the procedure, when the defendant had first obtained access
to the peritoneal cavity,
and had to free a loop of small bowel using
the LigaSure and scissors only, as he did not have a suprapubic port
in place through
which he could insert a grasper, in order that he
could get to the right ovary; whereas he now seemed to contend that
the damage
occurred when the adhesiolysis in respect of the left
ovary was performed. In response he conceded that whereas the
previous day
he had thought that the place where the bladder was
injured was on the right-hand side, he now thought that it was ‘more
to the left side’, in the vicinity of the left ovary. However,
notwithstanding his repeated assertion that the damage must
have been
sustained during the adhesiolysis depicted on B23, he then conceded
it was possible that the damage could have occurred
during the
adhesiolysis shown on photograph B14. He said that, either way, he
was of the view that the LigaSure was applied too
closely or tightly
to the peritoneum, and this had resulted in the bladder damage.
55.
He was asked why he was of the view that
the bladder was behind the grey/blanched area which is visible on
photograph B23. In response
he said this was because photograph B23
was the only photo which showed the presence of thermal damage i.e. a
‘burning effect’
on the pelvic wall, and that was why he
concluded that the bladder must have been behind it, as it sustained
a perforation. It
was put to him that, according to the defendant, it
was not the bladder but the vaginal vault which lay behind the
visible cautery
marks. He responded that the contention did not make
sense to him as it was common cause that damage was sustained to the
dome
of the bladder, which was ‘some distance away’ (sic)
from the vagina, and there was no evidence of any thermal damage
having been done to the vagina.
56.
It was further put to Prof Cronje that, in
performing the ligation during the adhesiolysis at B14, the defendant
had not placed
the LigaSure up against the peritoneum and the bladder
wall behind it, nor had he pulled part of the bladder into its jaws.
To
avoid damaging the bowel he had placed the LigaSure closer to the
bladder side than towards the bowel side of the adhesion, when
he
dissected it.
57.
As for whether the defendant should have
converted the laparoscopy to a laparotomy Prof Cronje conceded that,
although in his view
the plaintiff presented with a ‘difficult’
pelvis as there were a number of adhesions in it which involved
several
structures/organs including the bowel, bladder and ovaries,
this was a decision which the defendant was required to make at the
time, which depended not only on the number and extent of the
adhesions present in the abdominal cavity, but also the visibility
which the defendant had intraperitoneally, and his ability and
experience. Consequently Prof Cronje conceded that it could not
be
said that the defendant was obliged to convert the procedure to a
laparotomy, and it depended on the circumstances which he
faced at
the time.
58.
As far as the use of alternative cautery
and dissecting devices was concerned Prof Cronje agreed with the view
expressed by Dr Fölscher
that a LigaSure Maryland is often the
preferred option, as its use results in less blood loss and a more
controlled application
of thermal energy and (save for bipolar
scissors which Prof Cronje thought had a lateral thermal spread of
only 1mm) its lateral
spread is the lowest of the various alternative
powered cautery devices available.
59.
In his view the adhesion visible on
photograph B14 could have been dissected with ordinary scissors
instead of a LigaSure, as there
would have been little bleeding, and
it could have been cauterised with bipolar scissors.
60.
Finally, insofar as his opinion was based
on the perforation being a large one of 3cm, it was put to him that
the defendant, who
was present when Dr Nel performed the bladder
repair, would testify that this was the size of the ‘defect’
or perforation
after Dr Nel had pushed against it with cap of the
suction and it had opened up, and was then debrided and cleaned for
suturing.
When it was first observed via the laparoscope it presented
as a tiny, discoloured scab-like spot through which urine was seeping
into the abdomen. In response Prof Cronje said that surgeons usually
noted the size of a defect before they repaired it, but he
conceded
that he could not say that this is what Dr Nel did in his note of the
operation.
(iv)
Dr Pienaar
61.
Dr Pienaar was formerly a senior lecturer
and principal specialist at, and Head of, the Colorectal, HPB and
Laparoscopic surgical
unit of the University of Pretoria, from 2010
to 2017, when he retired. He has extensive experience in laparoscopic
procedures,
initially and primarily pertaining to the liver, gall
bladder, hernia and related surgery. He has worked with a LigaSure
device
on numerous occasions. He confirmed the contents of his
reports. In his first report he thought that the defendant had used a
LigaSure
Atlas. After further photos were produced by the defendant,
he corrected this in his second report to reflect that use had been
made of a LigaSure Maryland.
62.
In his view a surgeon using a LigaSure
Maryland should not activate the coagulant/cauterising function
thereof when operating in
the abdominal cavity and dissecting
adhesions unless he/she knows what structures or organs may be
impacted by it. The adhesion
at photograph B14 was flimsy and very
thin and there was no blood vessel in it of significance. The
defendant could accordingly
have cut it with a scissors or torn it
off with a grasper. Two types of scissors would be available:
standard laparoscopic scissors
or monopolar cautery scissors. If a
grasper had been used to dissect the adhesion any bleeding which
followed would have been insignificant.
If it was an issue a
monopolar cautery instrument could have been used to seal the area.
It was not necessary for the defendant
to use a LigaSure on that
adhesion, or if he did so, to use its cautery function. The LigaSure
could simply have been used to crush
or cut the adhesion, without
activating its cautery function, in which case there would not have
been a thermal injury.
63.
According to him the defendant had put up
conflicting versions. In his first report of 19 April 2016 he made no
mention of the bladder,
only stating that he was satisfied that there
was no injury to the bowel, and he simply said that the adhesion was
attached to
the abdominal wall. In contrast to this in his second
report of 5 May 2016 he referred to an adhesion to the anterior
abdominal
wall and the vaginal vault, at the bladder. He also said he
was concerned about both a possible bowel and a bladder injury, as
they were ‘closely’ adhered to one another. However, from
a consideration of the adhesion on photograph B14 it was evident
that
they were not closely adhered to one another. He was unable to say
how long the adhesion at photograph B14 was without an
instrument in
the photograph which could serve as a reference.
64.
It could not be said that a complication
had occurred when an instrument such as a LigaSure was used
‘off-spec’. In
his view, the only possible way the injury
would have been caused was if the LigaSure was applied to, or
against, the plaintiff’s
bladder. He did not think that thermal
energy could travel into the plaintiff’s bladder wall without
visible thermal damage
being present to the outer overlying layer of
tissue i.e. the peritoneum, which covered it. Thus, if thermal injury
had been caused
during the dissection at B14 one would have expected
to see some visible thermal damage, such as that which is visible on
the dissection
on photograph B23. Given that the perforation which Dr
Nel repaired was 3cm long one would expect there to have been visible
damage
to the anterior abdominal wall. As the view one obtains from
the laparoscope can be turned around, and it was not evident what the
orientation of photograph B23 was, the ovary that is visible in the
photograph could be the right one. In the circumstances the
bladder
dome could have been behind the area of visible thermal damage which
can be seen in the photograph, and he could not agree
that it was
anatomically impossible for the injury to have been sustained when
the adhesiolysis at B23 was performed. According
to him it was not
possible to say what organ was where, on the photograph.
65.
During cross-examination he conceded that
the ‘cookie cut’ which is visible on the right-hand side
of the image in photograph
B23 showed its orientation and it was
accordingly not upside down, and thus the ovary which is visible in
it was the left one.
Consequently, he agreed that the adhesiolysis on
photograph B23 was deep down in the abdominal cavity in the area of
the vaginal
vault and the bottom of the bladder, and not where the
dome or top of the bladder was. However, when it was again put to him
that
it was therefore anatomically impossible for the injury to have
been sustained during the adhesiolysis on B23 he did not answer
the
question and deflected it, asking whether the injury was ‘really’
at the top of the bladder or was not ‘somewhere
in the middle’
of the bladder wall ‘towards’ the top.
66.
Contrary to his report, he said that it was
not unreasonable for the defendant to have used a LigaSure Maryland
as it was one of
the options that were available to him, and he also
had no difficulty with the defendant’s decision to proceed
laparoscopically
and not to convert the procedure to a laparotomy. He
only took issue with how the LIgaSure was used. He said he would have
dissected
the adhesion at B14 by placing the LigaSure in the middle
of it, rather than at a point closer to the bladder side of it.
67.
In response to the contention that the
injury was caused when the thermal energy which was transferred into
the bladder wall resulted
in its devascularization and avascular
necrosis setting in, he said he was of the view that it was extremely
unlikely that necrosis
would have occurred if the LigaSure, which
only had a 2mm lateral thermal spread, was applied only to the
adhesion, and consequently
he and Prof Cronje were of the view that
the bladder wall must have been involved.
68.
He disputed that if the LigaSure was placed
against the bladder wall the perforation and leakage would have
manifested almost immediately,
as the plaintiff was catheterized. He
conceded however that once the catheter was removed and she was
discharged, the pressure
in her bladder would have built up. When
asked if he therefore contended that there must have been an
immediate perforation during
the procedure he said he did not know.
In his view the initial damage may have only been to the outer lining
of the bladder wall.
69.
That then as far as the evidence which was
tendered by the plaintiff.
(v)
The defendant
70.
The defendant obtained his MBChB degree
from the University of Stellenbosch in 1985. In 1993 he obtained his
master’s in medicine
and was admitted to the SA College of
Obstetricians & Gynaecologists. In 1995 he went to work as a
private gynaecologist in
Fort St Johns in British Columbia, Canada,
for 2 years.
71.
He first performed laparoscopic surgery for
diagnostic purposes, whilst he was a registrar in SA. The hospital he
worked at in British
Columbia had just acquired a set of laparoscopic
facilities, including a camera with monitors. By today’s
standards these
facilities were basic. He was not well versed in the
use of laparoscopic procedures at the time but received training. On
his return
to South Africa in 1997 he started practising in George
where he has been working for the last 27 years. He continued doing
laparoscopic
surgery in George and was performing an average of 2 to
4 laparoscopic procedures per week. Approximately 25-30% of the total
surgery
he performed was done laparoscopically.
72.
Initially, cautery devices were monopolar.
This was followed by the development of bipolar devices and
approximately 12-15 years
ago, the LigaSure Atlas. The LigaSure
Maryland became available approximately 5 years ago. He was one of
the first surgeons in
George to use it. He used it regularly for his
laparoscopic procedures.
73.
He confirmed the contents of his various
file notes. He saw the plaintiff on 13 April 2016 after she had been
referred to him by
Dr Nel. She presented with chronic, long-standing
epigastric pain. A scan revealed the presence of an ovoid-shaped cyst
on the
left ovary and a large, complex cystic structure on the right
ovary as well as a smaller one. Given the plaintiff’s age and
previous history it was necessary for the cysts to be removed and
investigated to exclude ovarian cancer, which is a rapid-growing
cancer. The plaintiff agreed that the procedure should be done as
soon as possible, and she was admitted on 19 April 2016.
74.
After she had been sedated and placed in a
lithotomic position the defendant emptied her bladder and made an
incision in her abdomen
just below the umbilicus, into which a trocar
was inserted for the laparoscope, which has a camera which affords a
live view which
is displayed on a monitor. The laparoscope allows for
photographs and videos to be taken during the procedure. The
defendant was
assisted by Dr E Muller, a general practitioner who he
had worked with for about 15 years. She was responsible for taking
photographs
during the procedure. He asked her to take photos of
moments that he thought were worthwhile recording, but as an
experienced assistant
she also used her own discretion as to when to
photograph anything she thought was important.
75.
Upon inspecting the inside of the
plaintiff’s abdominal/peritoneal cavity the defendant noted
that there were adhesions present,
but he was satisfied that he was
able to proceed laparoscopically, as he did not consider her to have
a ‘frozen’ or
‘difficult’ pelvis, such that
the procedure should be converted to a laparotomy. Laparotomies have
certain disadvantages
when compared to laparoscopic (so-called
‘keyhole’) surgical procedures. They can be accompanied
by post-operative
bleeding with a resultant drop in blood pressure
and hypovolemic shock, as well as bowel injuries, which are
particularly dangerous,
as faeces can contaminate the peritoneal
cavity and cause severe pain and infection, and a surgical repair may
require the patient
to wear a colostomy bag for several months before
the wound site is closed. A laparotomy can also result in possible
injury to
the ureter or bladder.
76.
During the laparoscopic procedures which
the defendant performed he would usually have 3 to 4 trocars in place
in the patient’s
abdomen: two larger (10 mm) ones and two
smaller (5 mm) ones.
77.
After he was satisfied that he could
continue with the procedure laparoscopically he asked his assistant
to make available a bipolar
scissors, suction and tubing, and a
LigaSure Maryland. The Maryland automatically determines the amount
of thermal energy which
is to be administered and the duration
thereof, by evaluating the thickness of the tissues and the blood
vessels that must be dissected
and cauterised, and it has the least
thermal spread. Thus, there is no danger of an over-application of
thermal energy, as might
occur if one were to use other bipolar
cautery devices such as bipolar scissors, or monopolar devices, which
require the operator
to apply the energy manually, in short bursts.
78.
He noted there was an adhesion between a
loop of small bowel and the anterior abdominal wall, and it was
evident that the right
ovary needed to be removed. To make space in
the abdominal cavity for the insertion of a 10 mm trocar
suprapubically, through which
this could be done, it was necessary to
first remove the adhesion, as it was in the way. Having regard for
the thickness and length
of the adhesion and the blood vessel in it
he elected to use the LigaSure Maryland to dissect it. He accordingly
made an incision
in the plaintiff’s right flank into which a 5
mm trocar was placed for the insertion of the LigaSure. Whilst there
were other
options available to him, in his assessment it was the
appropriate instrument to use at the time.
79.
The adhesion which he dissected was the one
shown on photograph B14. It was attached to the peritoneum
anteriorly. It was difficult
for him, from looking at the photograph,
to discern exactly what structure it was attached to, as it was
behind the peritoneum,
and thus not visible. However, given the
previous surgical incisions which had been made to the plaintiff’s
abdomen, as a
surgeon he was aware of what the possible structures
were which could lie behind the peritoneum, particularly the bowel
and bladder.
In this regard he said one would obviously always
consider that the bladder might possibly lie behind the peritoneal
wall. During
his evidence he identified where, on photograph B14,
these organs would have been, behind the peritoneum. Regarding the
sketch
exhibit D1 he pointed out that the Pfannenstiel scar which was
depicted on it was probably more extensive and extended further
downwards, towards where the bladder was depicted.
80.
He inserted the LigaSure Maryland through
the working port and used it to dissect the adhesion to free the loop
of bowel. As he
had only one workable port through which the LigaSure
was inserted he was unable to simultaneously use another instrument
to assist
in freeing the loop of bowel. It was not necessary to use a
grasper as gravity would ensure that once the loop of small bowel was
dislodged it would fall downwards, towards the plaintiff’s
head. Using a grasper could cause damage to a hollow organ if
it was
applied to it. As the bowel is relatively soft, if a grasper is
placed on or against it, or if an adhesion that is stuck
to it is
pulled from it using a grasper, it can be damaged.
81.
When asked where he applied the LigaSure on
the adhesion which is visible on photograph B14, he responded that as
the procedure
took place 7 ½ years ago and he had operated on
thousands of patients since then, there was no way that he could
honestly
make a mark on the photograph indicating precisely where the
adhesion was dissected. To spare the bowel from any possible injury
he routinely applied a ‘one-third/two-thirds’ rule in
such situations i.e. he would place the LigaSure at a point on
the
adhesion which was approximately two-thirds of the distance away from
the bowel side and approximately one-third of the distance
away from
the bladder side thereof. This is what he would have done in this
case.
82.
After he had dissected the adhesion, he saw
the loop of bowel fall away, towards the plaintiff’s head.
There was no bleeding
and from what he could see no damage had been
caused to the peritoneum, in the area where the bladder lay behind
it. After then
inserting a third trocar, supra-pubically, into which
he inserted a grasper, he proceeded to remove the cystic structures
around
the right ovary and the ovary, part of which process can be
seen on photographs B15-B20. During this process he used the LigaSure
again.
83.
He then turned to the left ovary, which, as
he pointed out on photograph B22, was also adhered to the bowel and a
cystic structure.
The separation of the left ovary from the adherent
structures was much easier that that of the right ovary. The process
can be
seen on photographs B22-B26. Once again, he used the LigaSure
to do the separation and dissection, this time with the assistance
of
the grasper. As can be seen on photograph B23, in the process thermal
damage was sustained by the surrounding tissues.
84.
After the left ovary was freed and its
cystic structures removed, he decided that it was not necessary to
remove it, and he accordingly
left it in situ. After washing out the
areas where the dissections had taken place, he was satisfied that
there was no bleeding
and he lined the abdominal cavity with
coagulant powder, as can be seen on photographs B27-B28. He then
switched off the machine
that was responsible for inflating the
peritoneum and, once the gas in the abdominal cavity had escaped, the
trocars were removed
and the entrance wounds sutured and the bladder
emptied, and the plaintiff was returned to a horizontal position.
After she had
recovered from the anaesthetic, he emptied her bladder
again and checked that there was no blood in her urine, and she was
then
taken back to the ward.
85.
On returning to his rooms he prepared his
file note on the operation. The following morning he visited the
plaintiff during his
ward round. After considering her clinical
records he was satisfied that she could be discharged. A few days
later he telephoned
her to enquire how she was doing. She said that
she was still sore but was getting better. She confirmed that her
bladder was functioning
and that she had normal bowel movements.
86.
On 3 May 2016 he was phoned by Dr I Van der
Merwe, the head of the Medi-Clinic emergency unit who informed him
that the plaintiff
had been admitted, complaining of severe abdominal
pain. Her blood counts were normal, and her urine was clear. An x-ray
which
was taken showed there was faecal loading. He advised Dr van
Der Merwe to admit the plaintiff as he was concerned about her. She
informed him she would let him know whether she was admitted to
Medi-Clinic or to the Geneva clinic, where the laparoscopy had
been
performed. As he did not hear from her again, he went to the
emergency unit later in the day where he was informed that the
plaintiff had been discharged. However, the following morning he
received a call from Dr Nel who informed him that he had admitted
the
plaintiff and an ultrasound which had been done revealed the presence
of clear fluid in her abdomen. He understood this to
mean that there
was a leakage of urine into the abdominal cavity. He went to the
radiology section to discuss the scan and report
with the radiologist
and then went to see the plaintiff. He was not well received by her.
87.
Dr Nel indicated that he was going to
perform a laparoscopy on her and he said he would attend. By the time
he got to theatre the
plaintiff was already sedated and in a
lithotomic position. When the laparoscope was inserted into her
abdominal cavity, they could
see there was a large volume of urine in
it and a small area of brownish discolouration on the dome of her
bladder, through which
urine was seeping into the cavity. The defect
or perforation was a small hole and was not 3 cm long. When Dr Nel
prodded it with
the suction it gave way. He then debrided and cleaned
the area around the perforation to ensure that the tissue around it
was live
and whole before suturing it closed.
88.
The defendant then left the theatre. As he
did so he came across the plaintiff’s husband, who was waiting
outside, and asked
him to accompany him to his rooms where he
explained to him that what had happened was a complication, for which
he took responsibility.
89.
He confirmed that in his 2
nd
file note of 5 May 2016 he had said that, in his assessment, the
perforation or defect he saw in the bladder dome was ‘in
the
same place’ (‘op dieselfde plek’) where the loop of
small bowel had been freed during the dissection of the
first
adhesion i.e. the one on photograph B14. There must therefore have
been a superficial injury to the bladder which deteriorated
and
eventually ruptured. In the final paragraph of his file note he
recorded that what had happened was a complication which occurred,
when, in avoiding injuring the bowel he had inadvertently injured the
bladder. He said, with reference to Prof Cronje’s sketches
(exhibits C and D), that the injury could not have been sustained
during the second adhesiolysis (at photograph B23) as the injured
spot on the bladder dome would have been about 6-8 cm away from that
area, if not further. If an injury had occurred at the time
of that
dissection, it would have been lower down the bladder, near to the
ureter, and not on the dome.
90.
When asked to explain how, in his view, the
perforation occurred, he said it was caused by the lateral spread of
thermal energy
which penetrated into the bladder wall, which over the
course of time resulted in avascular necrosis to an area on the dome,
which
gave way. The injury would not have been visible at the time
when the adhesiolysis at B14 was done as it would have been
occasioned
by microscopic changes to tissues in the bladder wall.
91.
He denied that he had failed to consider
that the plaintiff’s bladder might be behind the peritoneum
when he performed the
adhesiolysis at B14 or that he had left an
insufficient margin between the spot where he applied the LigaSure
and the peritoneum,
behind which the bladder lay.
92.
He conceded that there were discrepancies
between his file notes of 19 April and 5 May 2016 in relation to his
description of the
adhesions. In the first report he described the
adhesion of the loop of small bowel as adherent to the anterior
abdominal wall.
If one had regard for Prof Cronje’s sketches
the adhesion was more retro-pubic and extended towards the vaginal
vault, as
he said in his file note of 5 May. His assessment of where
the adhesions were adhered to in the abdominal cavity was not
performed
using a measuring device and was not exact. As he explained
in his earlier evidence his view inside the peritoneal/abdominal
cavity
was like being inside a balloon.
93.
Before he prepared his second report of 5
May 2016, he had not read the first one again and recorded the events
as he recalled them.
He pointed out that in any event the bladder sat
above the vaginal vault, and they were close to one another.
94.
During cross-examination he agreed that in
certain respects he may have conflated aspects of the two
adhesiolyses in his second
report which, in its description in
paragraph 2 seemed to deal with only one adhesion i.e. the one that
was dissected before the
right ovary was removed. He persisted with
his contention that if damage was sustained during the second
adhesiolysis (at photograph
B23) it would not have been to the dome
of the bladder, but lower down and to the back of it. As for the size
of the brownish-coloured
defect or perforation in the dome he said
that after the suction, which was about 5 mm wide, was pushed through
it, it may have
been about 1½ cm wide but was not 3 cm wide.
It could have been about that size after it was debrided and cleaned
i.e. after
the necrotic area around it had been removed, before it
was sutured.
95.
When performing the adhesiolysis at B14 he
did not foresee that a bladder dome injury might occur as he did not
anticipate that
the bladder would have been pulled up that high, and
he was accordingly not expecting it to be behind the peritoneum. It
was pointed
out that this appeared to be contrary to paragraph 2 of
his file note of 5 May 2016 where he said that he had been worried
about
a possible injury to the bowel and to the bladder, as they were
closely attached to one another.
96.
He agreed that, although he had felt safe
when placing the LigaSure on a spot one-third of the length of the
adhesion away from
the bladder side of it, in retrospect he had made
a ‘mistake’. He also conceded that he had other options
available
to him when dealing with the adhesion at B14, such as
cutting it with scissors and tying off its ends to staunch any
bleeding,
and that if he had done so it would not have resulted in an
injury to the bladder dome. Equally, he conceded that if he had
converted
the laparoscopy to a laparotomy before doing the first
adhesiolysis the injury would not have occurred. He said that,
nonetheless,
he was comfortable using the LigaSure and applying it to
the adhesions. Finally, when asked why, if he thought that the
procedure
had been untoward and had unfolded normally and there was
no cause for concern i.e. no reason to suspect that he had caused an
injury either to the bowel or the bladder he considered it necessary
to say this in his file note. He responded that he always said
this
in his reports of the laparoscopies he performed.
(vi)
Dr Fölscher
97.
After setting out his medical
qualifications Dr Fölscher noted that laparoscopic surgery was
first performed in 1901 for diagnostic
assessments. In 1987 the
modern laparoscope was introduced. It was first used in SA for
surgical purposes from about 1991 onwards.
By 1997 laparoscopic
procedures were being performed worldwide. He had extensive knowledge
of such procedures and had presented
courses in them in SA in
2006-2007. In 1999-2000 he had a fellowship with the Royal College of
Surgeons in the UK and did work
in Strasbourg. He knows the defendant
for many years, and they are colleagues, as they both practise in
George and have rooms at
the Geneva clinic.
98.
The LigaSure Atlas was introduced before
the LigaSure Maryland. Its jaws are approximately 10 mm (i.e. 1 cm)
wide, and end in a
blunt tip. It is used as a haemostatic instrument
to coagulate large blood vessels. In contrast to it the Maryland is a
smaller,
finer instrument with jaws which are about 5 mm in diameter,
in a curved tip. It is used both for cauterisation i.e. coagulation
of blood vessels and for dissection. It is a bipolar device which is
automatically controlled to generate the precise amount of
thermal
energy required to cauterise blood vessels. The device determines the
duration of the pulse of thermal energy which is
to be administered
by measuring the thickness of the tissue which is gripped in its
jaws, and then applies it. It has a visible,
lateral thermal spread
of approximately 2 mm on either side of its jaws. As a LigaSure
Maryland goes through a 5 mm port its jaws
are about 3½-4 mm
wide. According to the literature it has a thermal spread of 2 mm on
either side of its jaws. Thus its
total thermal footprint is in the
order of 7½-8 mm.
99.
The peritoneum covers a large part of the
bladder, including its dome or top, which is shaped almost like a
‘beanie’,
and which extends over about 3-4 cm.
Pfannenstiel incisions (which are made for so-called Caesarean
sections) will usually be very
near to the bladder dome. When they
are sutured, and the wounds heal, the tissue underneath is pulled up.
With each successive
such incision the underlying tissue and organs
that may have become adherent to it, such as the bladder and its
dome, will be pulled
up higher.
100.
In his view, given these circumstances, it
was anatomically impossible for the bladder dome to have been in
close proximity to the
vaginal vault, as it would have been pulled
up, as depicted in Prof Cronje’s sketch exhibit C2.
Consequently, if thermal
damage had been done to the bladder during
the adhesiolysis at photograph B23 it would have been to that part of
the bladder lower
down, which lay next to the vaginal vault, and not
to the dome, which was some distance away, and higher up. The thermal
damage
which is visible on the cauterized area on photograph B23
would have been in the area where the vaginal vault lay, as marked on
the sketch exhibit D1. Whilst much was said about the
greyish-coloured area of thermal damage on B23 it was not unusual to
see
this during laparoscopic procedures. He would have up to 30 such
discoloured areas of damage when he did a low anterior resection
of
the rectum.
101.
By his estimation, the adhesion on
photograph B14 was approximately 2-3 cm long and it would accordingly
have been safe for the
defendant to have applied the LigaSure on it,
at a point which was one third of the distance away from the bladder
side of the
adhesion, to avoid causing damage to the bowel, which lay
on the other side of it, behind the peritoneum.
102.
He agreed with the view expressed by the
other experts that, given that the injury was to the bladder dome and
manifested as a tiny,
discoloured hole or perforation, it was likely
to have been caused by avascular necrosis as a result of the
penetration of thermal
energy into the bladder wall, some distance
away. If the bladder had been scarred during previous surgery (the
plaintiff had two
Caeserean sections and a hysterectomy), the blood
supply to that section of it may have been diminished or compromised.
103.
He did not agree with Prof Cronje’s
contention that, because there was a 3 cm perforation in the bladder
dome the injury must
have been caused when the LigaSure was grabbed
by, or pulled into, its jaws. If this had happened the abdominal
cavity would have
filled up with urine within 3 days and because of
the pressure the perforation would have manifested itself within that
time (as
the bladder would have held for a day or two only, as it is
a cavity that is subject to high pressure), and not some 11 days
after
the laparoscopy. As the abdominal cavity was found to have only
1-1 ½ litres of urine in it when Dr Nel performed the
laparoscopy,
and the onset of acute pain occurred some 2-3 days
before the plaintiff’s admission, the perforation must have
been a small
one, which allowed for slow seepage into the abdominal
cavity. He said that he was ‘as sure as could be’ that
the perforation
and resultant leak could not have been present for
more than 2-3 days, as the leak was a ‘minor’ one. If the
plaintiff
had urine in her abdominal cavity for a lengthy period, or
for a short period at a high leakage rate, her urea count would have
shot up. From his assessment her urea count before the second
laparoscopy was only slightly elevated, at a level that one normally
would see in a person who was ill and had not been drinking and
eating properly for a day or so.
104.
He agreed with the defendant that the
plaintiff did not present with a difficult or frozen pelvis. There
were only two adhesions
present which needed to be dissected. The one
shown on photograph B14 was an ‘easy’ one to remove.
Although far and
away the best manner of dividing an adhesion was to
use scissors this was not so when there was a danger of bleeding. In
such a
case the safest device to use was a LigaSure Maryland or the
‘harmonic scalpel’, which was quite expensive. Monopolar
scissors cautery devices should not be used as the amount of thermal
energy they deliver cannot be controlled. In his travels throughout
the world he has never seen monopolar scissors being used for this
purpose during laparoscopic procedures and has never seen anyone
cut
and tie up an adhesion.
(vii)
Dr De Jong
105.
Dr De Jong is a specialist obstetrician and
gynaecologist with a certificate in uro-gynaecology. He specialises
in female gynaecological
disorders affecting the bladder. Although
bladder injuries have a complication occurrence rate of 1% during
gynaecological surgery
involving the removal of ovaries, they can
occur no matter how meticulous the surgeon may be, and there is
always a risk of a bladder
injury being sustained during such
procedures.
106.
In the plaintiff’s case both her
ovaries were adhered to the pelvic wall. She had two previous
Caesarean sections and a hysterectomy,
which distorted the anatomy in
her pelvic cavity and made adhesions inevitable. With each successive
surgical event the bladder
would have been pulled up higher, during
the surgical and healing process, and the concomitant formation of
adhesions.
107.
The adhesion shown on photograph B23 was
one involving the small bowel and the left ovary, not the bladder.
The bladder was involved
in the adhesion at photograph B14.
108.
The thermal damage which is caused by a
LigaSure extends beyond the 2 mm visible lateral spread on the sides
of its jaws, to microscopic,
invisible further damage to adjacent
tissue, resulting in a loss of its integrity and diminishment of the
blood supply downstream,
to capillaries and blood vessels supplying
the organ concerned with oxygenated blood. Thus, over time the
integrity and strength
of a bladder wall which is subjected to such
damage may be compromised and at a later stage, typically 2 weeks,
the tissue will
give way and leakage will occur. This is the result
of avascular necrosis which has occurred because of the reduction in
the supply
of oxygenated blood, which causes ischaemic damage to the
tissue. Where an area is well-vascularized i.e. well-supplied with
blood,
avascular necrosis will probably not occur as any damage will
be compensated for by other, collateral blood vessels in the area.
In
the case of fibrous, scar tissue or adhesions, vascularization will
not be present or if it is, will not be good, and a diminishment
or
loss of blood supply cannot be compensated for by other vessels.
109.
Avascular necrosis typically occurs in
Caesarean sections or at hysterectomy. His own experience and that of
colleagues is that
some 2 weeks after such surgical procedures
patients may present with a fistula between the bladder and vaginal
wall, due to avascular
necrosis. This is often also seen in cases of
surgery to remove cancer of the uterus and cervix, and in his
experience avascular
necrosis is the most common cause of bladder
leakage.
110.
Having regard to the evidence the most
likely cause of the perforation in the dome of the plaintiff’s
bladder was avascular
necrosis. As was evident from the evidence of
the defendant, and the contents of Dr Nel’s report, the
perforation manifested
as a discoloured area of tissue-like
consistency. The discolouration suggests there was a lack of blood
supply to the spot.
111.
All the experts were agreed that the
leakage of urine into the plaintiff’s abdominal cavity must
have started a day or 2 prior
to the onset of acute symptoms. She
presented to the emergency unit on 3 May 2016 with a 3-day history of
worsening abdominal pain.
112.
Had the bladder wall been pulled into the
jaws of the LigaSure during the performance of the adhesiolysis in
photograph B23, bladder
damage and the resultant leakage would have
been immediate, or the defect would have given way within a matter of
days, if not
hours, after the operative procedure. Had this been the
cause of the injury it would have manifested as an open 8-9 mm
cut/injury
in the wall of the bladder, lower down, or in the bottom
of it, and not in the dome, which sits at the top.
An assessment
(i)
The legal principles applicable
113.
The
principles in terms of which the issues which require determination
must be decided are trite and well-established, and a summary
thereof
will suffice. In the first place, in accordance with the general
principle that she who asserts must prove, it is for the
plaintiff to
prove that the injury she sustained was caused by the defendant’s
negligence.
[1]
To succeed in
this regard the plaintiff needed to prove that, in his performance of
the laparoscopy and his use of the LigaSure
the defendant failed, as
a medical practitioner, to adhere to that level of skill and
‘diligence’ i.e. care which was
possessed and exercised
at the time by members of that branch of the profession to which he
belonged i.e. specialist gynaecologists.
[2]
114.
The
defendant is not required to have exercised the highest possible
degree of professional skill and care, but merely to have employed
reasonable skill and care.
[3]
In
determining whether he did so the benchmark essentially is whether
his conduct fell below the standard of a ‘reasonably
competent’
practitioner in his field.
[4]
115.
Determining
whether the plaintiff has discharged the onus which rests upon her
requires the court to decide whether, on a careful
evaluation of all
the evidence which is before it, she has succeeded in proving the
negligence averred against the defendant, on
a balance of
probabilities.
[5]
116.
The
SCA has cautioned that a medical practitioner should not be held to
have been negligent simply because ‘something went
wrong’,
[6]
for to do so would be to ‘impermissibly reason backwards from
cause to effect’.
[7]
As is
so often evident ‘even with the best will in the world things
sometimes go amiss’ in surgical operations or medical
treatment.
[8]
117.
As
was noted in
Goliath,
[9]
a case such as this involves
questions of factual complexity and difficulty which require an
evaluation of technical, and at times
conflicting, expert evidence.
In this regard it is worthwhile reminding oneself of what the proper
approach to dealing with such
evidence should be.
118.
Expert
witnesses in medical negligence cases provide the court with evidence
of the current state of knowledge and generally accepted
practices in
their particular discipline, and of the inferences which they have
drawn and the resultant opinions they have arrived
at, and the
grounds upon which they have done so, in order to assist the court to
understand the factual and medical issues and
to arrive at a proper
determination of them.
[10]
119.
As
regards the opinions they express, for them to be worth anything they
should represent reasoned conclusions which have been arrived
at on
the basis of facts or data which are either common cause, or which
are otherwise established in evidence.
[11]
Thus, an expert’s bald statement of opinion unaccompanied by a
proper factual foundation is not of any ‘real assistance’
and a proper evaluation thereof can only be undertaken if the process
of reasoning which led to it, including the basis or premises
from
which it proceeded, is disclosed.
[12]
120.
Consequently,
before any weight can be given to an expert opinion the facts upon
which it is based must be found to exist,
[13]
and the more an expert relies on facts not established in evidence
the more the weight given to their evidence will diminish.
[14]
An opinion which is not based on facts in evidence has no value for
the court.
[15]
121.
Equally,
as far as inferences are concerned they must be ‘reasonably
capable’ of being drawn from the admitted facts
or those
established in evidence, and if they are tenuous or far-fetched they
cannot form the basis on which the court can make
a finding.
[16]
Unless there are objective, admitted or proven facts from which an
inference can be drawn, the method of arriving at it will fail,
and
one will be left with mere speculation or conjecture.
[17]
122.
Whilst
it is so that the determination of whether negligence was shown to
have been present is a matter for determination by the
court and not
the expert witnesses, it is bound to be informed by their opinions.
Thus, where there are conflicting or opposing
views in the experts’
respective opinions the court’s determination depends on an
analysis of the cogency of the underlying
reasoning which led
thereto.
[18]
To this end, the
court must determine whether the opinions have a ‘logical’
basis, in other words whether the experts
considered the comparative
risks and benefits of the relevant actions or conduct concerned,
including those in issue, and have
arrived at ‘defensible’
conclusions.
[19]
123.
Given
that expert witnesses in medical negligence matters are commonly
recognized, independent professionals who hold a certain
status and
measure of respect in their community, and their testimony is usually
based on peer-reviewed medical knowledge and scientifically
established facts, the issue of reasonableness (which pertains to the
defendant’s discharge of their legal duty towards the
patient)
and that of negligence (which pertains to whether they discharged
their duties with that level of skill and care as could
reasonably be
expected of them), will not usually depend on an assessment of the
credibility of such witnesses, as opposed to the
reliability of the
evidence which they have tendered.
[20]
124.
Where
the experts are in agreement with one another on issues of fact,
which agreement is embodied in a joint minute, the litigants
are
bound thereto, unless they have given notice that they have resiled
from it or repudiated it. In the absence of such repudiation
or
withdrawal the court is equally bound to accept the agreed facts.
[21]
Where the experts’ agreement pertains to issues of opinion the
matter stands on a different footing: The agreement is considered
to
be merely a part of the total body of evidence and the court must
still decide whether it will accept it. Thus, the existence
of such
an agreement will not preclude the admission of evidence which
qualifies or contradicts the agreed opinion(s), unless the
case has
been conducted on the basis thereof, and the admission of qualifying
or contradictory evidence will prejudice a party
in a manner which
cannot be cured.
[22]
125.
Where
experts express diametrically opposed opinions which they are able to
support by logical reasoning it is not open to a court
to simply
express a preference for one rather than the other, and on that basis
to hold the medical practitioner to have been negligent.
[23]
Provided he/she has acted in accordance with a reasonable and
respected body of medical opinion their conduct cannot be ‘condemned’
as negligent, simply because another equally reasonable and
respectable body of medical opinion would have acted differently.
[24]
(ii)
The findings
126.
It is time to arrive at the findings that
are to be made, in the light of the evidence which was tendered and
the opinions that
were expressed.
127.
Pursuant to, and as a result of, the
laparoscopic procedure which the defendant performed on the plaintiff
on 19 April 2016 she
sustained an injury to the dome of her bladder.
At the time of its repair some 2 weeks later, on 4 May 2016, the
injury presented
as a small, discoloured area of perforation, from
which urine was seeping from the bladder into the abdominal cavity.
When the
perforation was prodded with a suction it gave way and
opened up. After it was debrided and made ready for suturing it was
about
3 cm in length.
128.
Save for Dr Pienaar (who, in his evidence,
went against his concurrence on this aspect in the joint minute of 19
March 2020), the
experts were agreed that the perforation must have
manifested itself a day or two prior to the onset of the acute
symptoms with
which the plaintiff was admitted on 3 May 2016 i.e.
some 11 days after the laparoscopy.
129.
The size (small/’tiny’),
appearance (a brownish discolouration), place where it was located
(the bladder dome) and the
date when it manifested, substantiate the
opinion of the experts that the injury was occasioned by avascular
necrosis, due to inadequate
blood flow and circulation in the bladder
structure.
130.
The devascularisation was caused by thermal
energy i.e. heat that was transferred into the bladder wall when a
LigaSure Maryland,
a surgical instrument used to dissect and
cauterise, was used by the defendant on an adhesion in the
plaintiff’s abdominal
cavity, which was present due to previous
surgeries she had undergone.
131.
It is common cause that the defendant
performed two adhesiolyses: the first one (shown on photograph B14)
upon entering the abdominal
cavity, in order that he could remove the
right ovary and the cysts around it, and the second one (shown at
photograph B23) in
order that he could get to the left ovary and
remove the cysts that were around it. The plaintiff’s experts
contended that
the transfer of thermal energy which resulted in the
avascular necrosis occurred at the time of the performance of the
second adhesiolysis,
the defendant and his experts contended that it
occurred at the time of the first.
132.
Although the plaintiff’s experts
initially took issue with the use of a LigaSure to perform the
adhesiolyses, by the end of
the trial they agreed with the
defendant’s experts that it was not
per
se
inappropriate for the defendant to
have done so. Their issue was whether it was used in an appropriate
manner
,
with due regard for its dangers. Although the plaintiff’s
experts initially contended that the defendant should have made
use
of alternative, bipolar or monopolar cautery devices, by the end of
the trial they agreed with the defendant’s experts
that the use
of such devices would not have been appropriate, as their thermal
footprints exceed those of the LigaSure and the
amount of thermal
energy they discharge can be excessive, as it depends on the operator
and is not automatically regulated, as
in the case of the LigaSure.
133.
Whilst it is so that, if the defendant had
made use of an ordinary scissors there would have been no thermal
damage and resultant
necrosis, this could only have been done in
respect of the adhesion at B14, and not the one at B23, which was
complex and involved
several large areas which had to be dissected
from the surrounding structures. There was a divergence of opinion in
relation to
the adhesion at B14: the plaintiff’s experts were
of the view that the blood vessel in it was not substantial and the
bleeding
which would have been occasioned by a scissor or grasper
dissection would have been minimal and could have been avoided, or at
least staunched, by tying off the severed ends. The defendant’s
experts were of the view that the blood vessel was not insignificant,
and bleeding was an issue, and using a LigaSure was consequently the
proper way to deal with the adhesion. In my view the evidence
was not
such that it can be found that, in not using ordinary scissors or a
grasper to deal with the adhesion at B14 the defendant
failed to
measure up to that standard of skill and care required of a
reasonably competent practitioner, in his position.
134.
In addition, whilst the plaintiff’s
experts initially postulated that the defendant should have converted
the laparoscopy
to open surgery i.e. a laparotomy, by the end of the
trial they were in agreement with the defendant’s experts that
his decision
not to do so in the circumstances which he found
himself, given the number, location and nature of the adhesions that
were present
in the abdominal cavity and his experience, was not
inappropriate.
135.
Ultimately therefore, the issue which
requires determination pertains to the manner in which the LigaSure
was used. Prof Cronje
was of the view that, when performing the
second adhesiolysis (at B23) the defendant must have gone too close
to the bladder side
of it and must have pulled the bladder wall into
the LigaSure’s jaws and burnt it. In his view this was where
the thermal
damage which resulted in the necrosis occurred. Dr
Pienaar shared this opinion and expressed the view that the defendant
must have
applied the LigaSure against the bladder, more than once.
136.
There are several reasons why these
opinions cannot prevail. In the first place, the evidence of the
defendant and his experts was
that it was anatomically impossible for
the plaintiff to have sustained the injury to the dome of her bladder
as a result of the
second adhesiolysis, as it was too far away at the
time. In this regard the evidence which was tendered on behalf of the
defendant
was that it was about 6-8 cm away, and in his evidence,
Prof Cronje conceded that the bladder dome was ‘some distance
away’
from the area of thermal damage which was visible on
photograph B23. None of the plaintiff’s experts suggested that
thermal
energy from the LigaSure could have been transferred or
extended for such a distance. Prof Cronje referred to a study in
which
it was found that thermal energy from a LigaSure can be
transferred in surrounding or adjacent tissue, up to 9 mm away from
it.
Consequently, as the defendant’s experts opined, in the
event of thermal damage being caused to the bladder during the
performance
of the second adhesiolysis, it would have been towards
the bottom, lower part of the bladder and the vaginal vault and not
in the
dome, and if avascular necrosis had set in it would most
likely not have been in the dome. If this was possible
nonetheless,
given the distance involved, it was for the plaintiff to
have put up such evidence.
137.
In the second place, the evidence of the
defendant and his experts, which was not controverted, was that, had
the defendant caused
the peritoneum and bladder to be pulled into the
jaws of the LigaSure during the second adhesiolysis there would have
been a large
cut or perforation to the lower, bottom part of the
bladder wall with an almost immediate failure of the bladder, within
no more
than a few hours. Such a perforation would not have been the
result of a process of avascular necrosis but the result of a direct
insult to the bladder. In such an event the plaintiff would have been
admitted to hospital within a day or so of the procedure
and not
11-12 days post-operatively.
138.
In the circumstances, one must rule out the
adhesiolysis at B23 and one must also exclude the thesis that the
bladder was pulled
into, and gripped in, the jaws of the LigaSure and
burnt, during either adhesiolysis.
139.
That leaves the adhesiolysis at B14, which
is not well depicted on the photographs, of which, compared to the
one at B 23 there
are only a few. None of the available photographs
that deal with this adhesiolysis show that there was any thermal
damage caused
during the dissection/ligation. As the defendant’s
assistant took photographs of thermal damage which was sustained
during
the second adhesiolysis, there is no cause or reason to
believe that, had such damage also been sustained during the first,
she
would not equally have taken photos of it.
140.
The defendant’s evidence was that
after he had dissected and ligated this adhesion there was no visible
thermal damage to
the adjacent tissue. This tallies with his evidence
that there was a sufficient margin of safety on either side of the
LigaSure
for him to place it at a point ‘one-third/two-thirds’
along the adhesion, closer to the bladder side thereof than the
bowel, to avoid injuring the latter. None of the witnesses gave
evidence as to the precise size, or rather the length, of this
adhesion. Dr Pienaar was unable even to provide an estimation as
there was not an instrument or device visible in the photograph
at
B14 which could serve as a reference. In this regard it was common
cause that the images in the photographs were magnified views
and not
actual ones. Dr Fölscher thought the adhesion was somewhere
between 2 and 3 cm long. If one were to assume, using
this rough
estimation, that it was about 2.5 cm long, and the LigaSure had a
thermal footprint of 7½-8 cm, then the defendant
would not
have been within the lateral spread margin of 2 mm if he placed it at
a spot one-third along the adhesion, closest to
the bladder side of
it.
141.
This raises the pertinent question of what
the safety margin was within which the defendant was required to
operate. The plaintiff’s
experts failed to establish this in
their evidence, which came down to the simple contention that the
defendant had either adopted
no safety margin at all, by pressing the
LigaSure up against the peritoneum, and thus against the bladder wall
behind it (which
as I have found was not proven in evidence), or came
‘too close’ to these structures. But what is ‘too
close’?
It seems, from their evidence, that they were
contending that the safety margin was in the order of about 2 mm, to
allow for the
lateral thermal spread which extends on the side of the
LigaSure’s jaws. The difficulty with this is that, on
Prof
Cronje’s understanding of the literature, thermal damage
can extend up to 9 mm away from the source. Thus, to rule out the
possibility of any thermal damage and resultant avascular necrosis
ever being sustained, a surgeon would have to operate with a
safety
margin of about 12 mm when performing an adhesiolysis in the
abdominal cavity.
142.
However, none of the experts said that they
applied such a margin when they used the LigaSure, in the many
laparoscopies which they
performed, over many years. It seems to me
that without the necessary standard or benchmark at least being
established in evidence,
it cannot be said that the defendant was
negligent in that he failed to measure up to that standard of care
that would have been
exhibited by a reasonable gynaecologist in his
position. Whether it would even have been possible to set such a
margin in evidence
seems to be doubtful, given that there was no
evidence as to the (likely or approximate) distance between the
perforation on the
dome and the spot where the LigaSure was applied
on the adhesion at B14. Once again, this is an aspect which the
plaintiff’s
experts should have dealt with.
Conclusion
143.
In the circumstances, in my view the
plaintiff failed to show that, in his use and application of the
LigaSure during the performance
of a laparoscopic procedure on her on
19 April 2016, the defendant was negligent, and that such negligence
resulted in her sustaining
a perforation in the dome of her bladder.
In my view the perforation to the bladder was an unfortunate
complication, of the kind
which, as the defendant’s experts
explained, can occur in the best of hands.
144.
As far as costs are concerned these should
follow the event. The bulk of these were incurred before 12 April
2024, on which date
the amendments to rule 67 (in the form of rule
67A) read with rule 69, were gazetted, which require the court to
stipulate in its
order for costs, on what scale they should be. The
amendment is only applicable to costs that were incurred from 12
April 2024
onwards. Costs incurred prior to that date fall to be
dealt with by the taxing master in accordance with the previous
dispensation
which applied.
145.
As the amendment is applicable to
attendances and services rendered in the High Court by advocates and
attorneys with a right of
appearance, and the defendant was
represented by a senior attorney with such a right, it is necessary
to make a directive in this
regard.
146.
To determine what the scale should be the
rule provides that the court should have regard for the complexity,
value and importance
of the matter. The plaintiff was represented by
an advocate of many years standing, who submitted that, in the event
of success
costs should be awarded on the highest scale, scale C. In
his submissions the defendant’s attorney did not contend for
the
award of costs on a particular scale and left the matter in the
hands of the court.
147.
Having regard for all the applicable
factors, I make the following order:
147.1
The action is dismissed.
147.2
The plaintiff shall be liable for the costs
of suit, which, in respect of attendances after 12 April 2024 shall
be on scale C, and
which shall include the qualifying fees and costs
of the attendance at the hearing of the defendant’s expert
witnesses, Drs
Fölscher and De Jong.
M
SHER
Judge of the High
Court
(Signature
appended digitally)
Appearances
:
Plaintiff’s
counsel: CH Botha
Plaintiff’s
attorneys: Sloet & Burger Inc (George)
Defendant’s
attorney: GP Van der Merwe (MacRobert Attorneys, Cape Town)
[1]
Goliath
v MEC for Health, Eastern Cape
[2014] ZASCA; 2015
(2) SA 97 (SCA) paras 8 and 12.
[2]
Van
Wyk v Lewis
1924 AD 438
at 444;
Goliath
id.
[3]
Mitchell
v Dixon
1914 A.D. 419
at 525;
Goliath
id.
[4]
Castel
v De Greeff
1993 (3) SA 501
(C) at 512A-B,
Buthelezi
v Ndaba
2013 (5) SA 437
(SCA) para 15.
[5]
Goliath
n 1 para 11.
[6]
Id
para 9.
[7]
Id
para 13.
[8]
Hucks
v Cole
[1968] 118 New LJ 469
, cited in
Buthelez
i
n 4 para 15.
[9]
Note 1.
[10]
AM &
Ano v MEC for Health, Western Cape
[2020] ZASCA 89
;
2021 (3) SA 337
(SCA) para 17.
[11]
Coopers
(SA) (Pty) Ltd v Deutsche Gesellschaft MBH
1976 (3) SA 352
(A) at 371A-H.
[12]
Id.
[13]
PriceWaterhouseCoopers
Inc v National Potato Co-Op Ltd & Ano
[2015] ZASCA 2
;
[2015] 2 All SA 403
(SCA) para 99;
AM
n 10 para 20;
HAL
obo MML v MEC for Health, Free State
[2021] ZASCA 149; 2022 (3) SA 571 (SCA)
[14]
AM
id.
[15]
HAL
n 13 para 208.
[16]
AM
n 10 para 21.
[17]
id.
[18]
Buthelezi
n 4 para 14.
[19]
Michael
& Ano v Linksfield Park Clinic & Ano
2001 (3) SA 1188
(SCA) paras 36-37;
HAL
n 13 para 53.
[20]
Id, para 34.
[21]
Bee v
Road Accident Fund
[2018] ZASCA 52
;
2018 (4) SA 366
(SCA).
HAL
n 13
para 229.
[22]
Id. Thus, where parties place an agreed minute before the court
which reflects both shared opinions and areas of disagreement,
and
do not call witnesses to deal with the areas of disagreement, the
minute will do no more than to reflect that there is disagreement
on
the point.
[23]
Linksfield
Park Clinic
n
19 para 39.
[24]
Medi-Clinic
Ltd v
Vermeulen
[2014] ZASCA 15
;
2015 (1) SA 241
(SCA) at 243G-H.
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