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$2.3 Million settlement in obstetrics/radiology malpractice case
April, 2005
After selecting a jury in Delaware County, PA, Feldman Shepherd
attorneys Carol
Nelson Shepherd and Peter
M. Newman negotiated a $2.3 million settlement for a 5
year old girl who sustained severe neurologic injuries caused
by the failure of the defendant physicians to diagnose and
treat twin-to-twin transfusion syndrome (“TTTS”).
TTTS is a phenomenon that occurs only in monochorionic (shared
placenta) twin pregnancies when the arterial circulation of
one twin is in communication with the venous circulation of
the other twin through arteriovenous anastomoses. Blood is
transfused from the “donor” twin to its “recipient”
sibling such that the donor becomes growth restricted while
the recipient develops circulatory overload with associated
complications. (To see a trial exhibit illustrating TTTS,
click
here). A confidentiality clause in the settlement agreement
precludes disclosure of the names of the defendant physicians
and institutions.
Plaintiff’s mother was 10 weeks pregnant when an ultrasound
revealed a twin gestation. Unfortunately, the radiologist
interpreting that ultrasound failed in his duty to determine
whether the twins shared a placenta. To see a trial exhibit
illustrating how monochorionic and dichorionic twin gestations
appear on a 10
week ultrasound, click here. Monochorionic twins (that
share a placenta) are at increased risk for complications,
including TTTS.
A second ultrasound, performed eight weeks later, noted an
18% discrepancy in the weight of the twins, a large discrepancy
in their abdominal circumferences, and an amniotic fluid imbalance,
all signs and symptoms of TTTS. Unfortunately, the defendant
obstetricians failed to take action to monitor and treat the
evolving syndrome. Treatment options for TTTS include serial
amnioreduction therapy (redistribution of amniotic fluid)
and fetoscopic
laser occlusion (surgery to separate the blood vessels
that connect the twins). A third ultrasound performed at 29
weeks gestation revealed the intrauterine fetal demise of
the smaller twin. Blood shunted from the surviving twin to
the demised twin then caused the surviving twin to suffer
hypoxia and resulting neurologic injury.
Plaintiff was prepared to present testimony at trial from
experts in the fields of obstetrics, radiology, pediatric
neurology, perinatology, pediatric neuropsychology as well
as a life-care planner and an economist in support of her
claim.
However, the case was strongly contested by the defendants
who proposed to call experts from the fields of obstetrics,
radiology, pathology, pediatric neurology, perinatology, pediatric
neuropsychology and forensic economics, to testify not only
that there were other possible causes of injury to the minor-plaintiff,
but also that treatment options for TTTS, if present, were
experimental in nature and would not likely have avoided injury
to the plaintiff.
The settlement will be held in trust for the 5 year old plaintiff
to meet her future needs.
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