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England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Mugweni v NHS London [2011] EWHC 334 (QB) (23 February 2011) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2011/334.html Cite as: [2011] EWHC 334 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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GRACE ELLEN MUGWENI (A Patient By her Mother and Litigation friend SUSAN RUTH MUGWENI |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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NHS LONDON (As successor to SOUTH EAST LONDON STRATEGIC HEALTH AUTHORITY) |
Defendant |
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Neil Block QC and Judith Ayling (instructed by Hempsons) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 17th, 18th.,19th, 20th , 21st, 24th, 25th, 26th, 28th and 31st January 2011
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Langstaff :
The Background Facts
"…..After venting all air from the heart and closing all incisions the heart regained sinus rhythm spontaneously on removing the fibrillation current. On discontinuing bypass the heart took over the circulation satisfactorily and post-op pressures revealed a right ventricular pressure of 35mmHg with no evidence of significant venous arterial Oxygen saturation step up across the right heart.
Having ascertained there was satisfactory haemostasis the pericardium was closed and the chest closed routinely with retrosternal and peri-cardial drains.
As the patient was being prepared to be moved to the incubator from the operating table cardiac arrest occurred and external cardiac massage was necessary.
The chest was re-opened under massage conditions and it was confirmed that there was no tamponade but the cause of the arrest was a right tension pneumothorax. The tension pneumothorax was relieved and a right pleural drain inserted by when the heart had regained normal sinus rhythm and a good circulatory status. At no time was there any significant period of circulatory arrest.
The chest was then re-closed routinely with retrosternal and pericardial drains."
"Proceed
Ligation of large PDA + suture closure of low 2o ASD
Difficulty on coming off bypass because of R.sided pneumothorax + ET tube blocked with secretions (Patient arrested)…"
Breach of Duty
Breach Causation
Causation of Brain Damage
(i) hypothetically an hour of non-damaging hypotension was needed before there would be damaging hypotension – yet the total time on bypass was not long enough for both this and the 30 minutes to occur;
(ii) although it was well recognised that being on bypass could cause neurological injury, on examination the literature showed no support for watershed let alone hypo-perfusion injury being caused after infant heart surgery;
(iii) nor did it support a case that there were injuries after simpler open heart operations, which were much less complex and of shorter duration than those performed for such as TGA or hypoplastic left heart;
(iv) an injury is not an inevitable consequence of bypass: even in these more complex cases it does not always occur. By contrast, the court could be certain that hypo-perfusion had occurred here at the point of cardiac arrest (it could hardly be otherwise).
"Premature infants who suffer mild to moderate hypotension typically sustain injury to the periventricular white matter with sparing of the subcortical white matter and cerebral cortex. In contrast, term infants who suffer similar degrees of hypotension sustain injury in the watershed portions of the cerebral cortex and in the underlying subcortical and periventricular white matter. Classically, this change in injury pattern has been attributed to a changing location of the intervascular boundary zones (watershed regions)……….as a result of the immaturity of the premature brain and its vascular supply, the periventricular areas are the regions at highest risk when autoregulation is compromised. Periventricular white matter damage (periventricular leucomalacia [PVL]) is therefore a common finding on imaging studies of stressed premature infants…..Somewhere between the 34th. and 36th. postconceptual weeks, the pattern of injury begins to change as the regions at highest risk for injury extend peripherally to include the subcortical white matter and cerebral cortex in the interarterial boundary zones. These so-called watershed areas are almost always involved if mild to moderate hypotension of sufficient duration occurs after 36 weeks."
"..a predilection for WMI (white matter injury) in these term infants is highly unusual. The typical result of global injury in a term infant is predominantly damage located to the basal nuclei…or intervascular boundary watershed regions. WMI is more commonly observed after impaired oxygen delivery or infection in the premature infant. These patterns of injury are thought to result from differences in selectively vulnerable cell populations between premature and term infants' brains…The continued susceptibility of the white matter in newborns with CHD suggests a relative immaturity of brain development……"
Further Observations
Conclusions
Note 1 On 24th January her evidence was transcribed. At page 35, from lines 28 to 27, Dr. Rennie told me that PVL was thought to occur in the borderzone of the pre-term brain. The pre-oligodenroglia are thought to be there. My understanding of the evidence is that in the course of maturation, they migrate, and are precursors of that part of the white matter which is peri-ventricular. It was in cross-examination that she first detailed her explanation to the effect that this explains why in general hypoxic-ischaemic lesions which in a term neonate might give rise to borderzone injury manifest themselves as PVL in the foetus or in a neo-nate challenged by the effects of congenital heart disease. This was not directly challenged, nor evidence led to the contrary, although her counterpart Professor Mitchell was in court and Dr.Miles, paediatric neurologist, was yet to be called. [Back] Note 2 Professor Mitchell used the term hypoxia rather than hypoxic-ischaemia in his report, and was criticised by Mr. Block QC for doing so. [Back] Note 3 Current Opinion in Pulmonary Medicine, July 1999. [Back] Note 4 Anesthesiology Nov. 1996, Vol.85, no. 5, 1200-2 [Back] Note 5 Evidence 24 Jan 2011, transcript p. 15, lines 30-33 [Back] Note 6 Paediatric Neuroimaging, 3rd. edn., 1999 [Back] Note 7 at p. 170-1, Chapter 4 [Back] Note 8 “An MRI Study of Neurological Injury Before and After Congenital Heart Surgery”, Circulation, 2002, at pp. 109-114. [Back] Note 9 He noted it was thought that the pathogenesis of PVL was related to hypoxia/ischaemia to immature oligodendroglia in the process of myelination, which are most vulnerable to injury [Back] Note 10 “Temporal and Anatomical Risk Profile of Brain Injury With Neonatal Repair of Congenital Heart Defects”, Stroke 2007, 736-741 [Back] Note 11 “Congenital Heart Disease and brain development” Ann. N.Y.Acad.Sci. 1184 (2010) pp 68-86 [Back] Note 13 Acta Neuropathol (2005) 110, pp 563-578 [Back] Note 14 Ann. Thorac. Surg. 2009; September; 88(3); 823-9 [Back] Note 15 “Acquired Neuropathic Lesions Associated with Hypoplastic Left Heart Syndrome”: Paediatrics, 1990; 85; 991-1000 [Back] Note 16 “Clinical profiles of subjects with subcortical leukomalacia and border-zone infarction revealed by MRI”, Acta Paediatr 87; 879-93 (1998) [Back] Note 17 N.b. this has to be distinguished from cardiac arrest: the essential distinction is that arrest involves a stoppage of heart function, failure an insufficiency of it. [Back] Note 18 “Incidence of neurological complications of surgery for congenital heart disease”, Archives of Disease in Childhood 1995; 72: 418-422 [Back] Note 19 If an hour and a half of hypoperfusion capable of being damaging were required, neither the Defendant’s nor Claimant’s case could provide it. [Back] Note 20 Save for paragraph 22 of the Claimant’s written closing argument: but this relates to breach of duty, which I have found established. [Back] Note 21 The Claimant was on notice of this point and had the opportunity to refer me to such material but did not do so. [Back]