This is a malpractice action. We are asked to determine whether a two-year statute of limitations bars the claim of a patient who alleges that her doctor’s failure to remove an intrauterine device caused her to become infertile. The district court dismissed the suit as untimely because the patient failed to file suit within two years after her relationship with her We agree and affirm the doctor ended, dismissal.
I.
Dr. Jean Pearson treated Donna Granahan for recurring vaginal infections and salpingitis 1 from September of 1973 through October of 1979. 2 When she first visited Pearson, Granahan wore an intrauterine device (IUD). Dr. Pearson removed Granahan’s first IUD in August of 1974 and replaced it with another intrauterine device in October of that year. In August of 1982, Granahan visited another doctor who informed her that she was permanently infertile because of tubal blockage. This second doctor removed Granahan’s IUD.
Granahan filed suit against Dr. Pearson in February of 1984 seeking $1 million in damages. She claimed that Pearson negligently failed to remove her IUD when she showed “obvious signs” 3 of Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID). Granahan contends the presence of the IUD caused the development of chronic PID which resulted in tubal blockage and infertility.
Dr. Pearson challenged Granahan’s suit, claiming the statute of limitations barred the action. The district court agreed and dismissed the claim. The court held the two-year statute of limitations in this case began to run upon Granahan’s last visit to Pearson in 1979. Granahan now appeals that ruling.
II.
Jurisdiction in this case is based on diversity of citizenship. This court must therefore examine Virginia law to determine the applicable statute of limitations and isolate the moment at which a claim accrues under the statute.
See Ragan v. Merchants Transfer & Warehouse Co.,
*32 In Virginia, a plaintiff must file suit for personal injuries within two years after the claim accrues. Virginia Code § 8.01-143 (1950, 1984 Rep.Vol.). The claim accrues and the statute of limitations begins to run when a plaintiff is injured. Id. at § 8.01-230. The issue in the present case is thus the timing-of Granahan’s injury.
Granahan claims that she was injured when she became infertile. She asserts that her tubal blockage occurred within two years of the filing of her suit. In support of her contention that this action is timely, Granahan cites
Locke v. Johns-Manville Corp.,
III.
Despite her arguments to the contrary,
Locke
provides no refuge for Granahan because it is factually distinguishable. The plaintiff in
Locke
could not have filed suit when he was negligently exposed to asbestos because he was not injured at that time. An injury was needed to complete his cause of action.
See Locke,
Granahan’s sterility constituted consequential damage.
5
She was initially injured when, despite recurring pelvic infections, her doctor failed to remove her IUD. The Virginia Supreme Court in
Locke
embraced this distinction between initial and consequential damages.
6
The court in
Locke,
*33
cites with approval an earlier decision in which it stated that a cause of action accrues if any injury, no matter how slight, occurs upon the completion of a wrongful act or omission.
The Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals has also recently addressed the issue of splitting a plaintiff’s consequential and initial injuries to meet statute of limitations filing deadlines. This court in
Brown v. American Broadcasting Co.,
Finally, we note that the Virginia Supreme Court in
Locke
did not explicitly overrule its earlier decision in
Farley v. Goode,
The Virginia Supreme Court in Farley articulated the point in time at which the statute of limitations begins to run on a malpractice action. The court stated:
[w]hen malpractice is claimed to have occurred during a continuous and substantially uninterrupted course of examination and treatment in which a particular illness or condition” should have been diagnosed in the exercise of reasonable care, the date of injury occurs, the cause of action for that malpractice accrues, *34 and the statute of limitations commences to run when the improper course of examination, and treatment if any, for the particular malady terminates.
We agree with the district court that Farley is controlling. Granahan was injured when, despite signs of Pelvic Inflammatory Disease, her doctor failed to remove her IUD. Under Farley, the statute of limitations began to run from the date of Granahan’s last visit with her doctor rather than the date upon which she became sterile. Her infertility was inexorably linked to the illness for which Granahan sought treatment from Pearson. 8 -
IV.
It is unfortunate that Granahan did not discover her infertility until after the Virginia statute of limitations barred her claim against Pearson. We are, however, bound to follow Virginia law. That state has chosen to begin the running of the statute of limitations from the moment a plaintiff suffers an injury. Granahan was injured when the IUD was allowed to remain in her body. Her malpractice claim accrued when her relationship with Dr. Pearson ended. For Granahan, the doctor-patient relation^ ship ended , in 1979. This malpractice suit commenced in February of 1984 — well past the two-year statute of limitations filing deadline. Granahan’s suit was untimely. The district court’s decision is therefore affirmed.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Salpingitis is an inflammation of the fallopian „ or eustachian tubes. Webster’s Third New International Dictionary (1981).
. For purposes of this discussion of the applicability of the statute of limitations, we will assume that all of the allegations in Granahan’s complaint are true.
. Joint Appendix at 16, Plaintiffs Complaint at paragraph 8.
. The court in
Locke
made clear that "injury” for purposes of the statute of limitations meant "positive, physical or mental hurt to the claimant, not legal wrong in the broad sense that his legally protected interests have been invaded."
Furthermore, the court in
Locke
made clear that it was dealing with a unique problem in assessing the moment at which an injury occurs in a case involving mesothelioma, the symptoms of which usually are manifested shortly after the disease actually develops. The court stressed that “the rule we have just articulated is not a so-called ‘discovery’ rule----” The court noted that under its decision in
Locke
expert testimony may show that an injury actually occurred years before the onset of symptoms but “the limitations period would run from the earlier and not the later time.”
The Virginia Legislature recently addressed the unique situation of determining when the statute of limitations begins to run in cases involving asbestos-related injuries. A 1985 amendment to the Virginia Code provides that a cause of action for personal injuries from exposure to asbestos accrues when a diagnosis of a disabling asbestos-related injury or disease is first communicated to the person or his agent by a physician. See § 8.01-249(4). The Virginia Legislature could have extended the discovery rule to other personal injury cases but chose instead to limit its application to the narrow field of asbestos-related injuries. By implication, the legislature preserved the harsher rule for accrual of causes of actions in all other personal injury cases.
. By “consequential” damages we mean the subsequent damages that flow from the initial harm.
. For other examples of this distinction between initial and consequential damages
see, e.g., Comptroller of Virginia ex. rel. Virginia Military Institute v. King,
.
Brown
concerned an action for damages stemming from alleged defamation and conspiracy to injure plaintiffs reputation. The plaintiff in
Brown
contended that under
Locke
the statute of limitations did not begin to run until she learned of an allegedly defamatory broadcast and became emotionally upset.
Another decision by this court that examines the impact of
Locke
on consequential damages is
Large v. Bucyrus-Erie Co.,
. Granahan cannot separate the injury she suffered when the IUD was left in her body from the tubal blockage that later developed. Her complaint is replete with examples of Granahan’s own confirmation that she was actually injured before she became sterile. The complaint states that during the time she was treated by Dr. Pearson, Granahan had obvious signs of Pelvic Inflammatory Disease which became chronic PID and "this, in turn, has led to tube blockage and permanent infertility." Joint Appendix at 16, Plaintiffs Complaint at paragraph 8. Furthermore, the complaint states that Granahan's injury was "ongoing and continuous up to and beyond August of 1982." Id., Plaintiffs Complaint at paragraph 10.
