12 Mass. App. Ct. 939 | Mass. App. Ct. | 1981
This action for medical malpractice resulted in a verdict for the plaintiffs when it was allowed to go to the jury over the defendant’s objection. The female plaintiff had undergone a laparoscopic tubal ligation while anesthetized and in the process had suffered a burn on the outside of her right leg slightly above the knee. The ligation was effected through cauterization by means of an electrical current applied to a section of tube. The current was completed through a rounded metal plate which was made to fit around the patient’s thigh. If the plate was not properly applied, so that it did not diffuse the current over a large enough area of the patient’s skin, a burn would result. The defendant, an obstetrician-gynecologist, who had performed the operation hundreds of times before and after the one at issue without untoward results, testified that he had checked the positioning of the metal plate before applying the current and that it had been properly applied by the nurse. The defendant theorized that the burn may have been caused by a defect in the metal plate, perhaps at the point where the cord carrying the current connected to the
Judgment affirmed.