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The time course on this sounds very weird. She had an ESI and had numbness in the legs immediately after (don't put local in your epidurals, kids!). She was monitored for about 90 minutes in the pain clinic. This apparently was found as negligent in the case, although if I'd put lidocaine in an epidural (not sure if this one did), I would've done the exact same thing. When no improvement, was sent to ER. Took 1.5 hours to get stat MRI done, surgery was done 5 hours after arriving at the ER.
First of all, immediate hematoma? I guess that's possible if they found an artery. But it's certainly not the first thing I'd be thinking of. I would think that surgery within 8 hours of the injury would not result in permanent paralysis, as I've seen surgeons watch hematomas for even a couple of days with serial neuro exams. But unfortunately this is what happened.
A North Texas hospital waited hours to address a spinal emergency. It led to a woman's paralysis and a $10.1 million court win for her
First of all, immediate hematoma? I guess that's possible if they found an artery. But it's certainly not the first thing I'd be thinking of. I would think that surgery within 8 hours of the injury would not result in permanent paralysis, as I've seen surgeons watch hematomas for even a couple of days with serial neuro exams. But unfortunately this is what happened.
A North Texas hospital waited hours to address a spinal emergency. It led to a woman's paralysis and a $10.1 million court win for her