Botched spine
surgery leads to $22.4 million jury verdict
Monday, October 25, 1999
By April White
Edward Calli, a 42-year-old man from New Jersey, could attend
only half days of his 10-day medical malpractice trial against
Philadelphia's Episcopal Hospital and its chief of neurosurgery,
Saied Alemo.
The constant pain from his botched spine surgery - and two
subsequent surgeries required to correct the errors - has
left him unable to sit for long periods, his lawyer Mark Tanner
of Feldman Shepherd & Wohlgelernter, explained.
The jury sat in deliberations for only three hours before
returning a $22.4 million verdict Friday, awarding $17.6 million
to Calli and $4.8 million to Calli's wife, Sandra for loss
of consortium.
The case was presented before Judge Victor J. DiNubile. Anna
Bryan of White & Williams represented the hospital, and
Rick McDonald of McDonald & Synder represented Alemo.
The jury found that the spine surgery that Calli underwent
in November 1992 was both unnecessary and improperly performed,
Tanner said.
Calli was born with spondylolisthesis, a condition in which
one vertebra is displaced onto the vertebra below it, causing
compression of nerve roots. The condition caused him chronic
back pain and occasional leg pain.
When the pain began to affect his work as a nurse at Newman
Medical Center, he sought treatment.
Alemo recommended lumbar spinal fusion, a surgery in which
the displaced vertebra would be realigned to stop the pressure
on the nerves. According to Tanner, Calli consulted several
neurosurgeons who did not suggest surgery, but Calli trusted
Alemo's claim that he could return to work without pain.
According to evidence presented during the trial, Alemo had
never performed a lumbar spinal fusion, a procedure which
requires the insertion of metal rods and wires to realign
the bones correctly.
"This is not a basic neurosurgical procedure,"
Tanner said he told the jury. "It requires special hands-on
training."
The jury's finding against the hospital indicated its belief
that the hospital should not have given Alemo privileges to
perform the surgery, Tanner said.
During the first surgery, metal rods which should have been
implanted in the hip bone were left unanchored. Following
the procedure, several wires broke, rupturing the protective
sac around Calli's spinal cord.
In an attempt to remedy this, Alemo performed a second surgery
eight days after the first.
According to Tanner, the second surgery "made things
worse."
A bone cement, methylmethacrylate, used in that procedure
prevented the vertebrae from fusing, the original goal of
the surgery.
It was Alemo's original denial that he used the bone cement
and his eventual admission during cross-examination which
led the jury to return the verdict, Tanner believes.
The acrylic substance was also visible to the jury in X-rays.
Calli subsequently underwent a 23-hour spinal surgery at
Thomas Jefferson University Hospital, but he remains in pain,
can walk only short distances and has been unable to return
to work.
"I think the jury did the right thing," Tanner
said "these were deserving plaintiffs, but regardless
of what they have recovered, it won't replace what they have
lost." |