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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Welch v Waterworth [2015] EWCA Civ 11 (22 January 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2015/11.html Cite as: [2015] EWCA Civ 11 |
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ON APPEAL FROM Manchester County Court
His Honour Judge Armitage QC
1IQ09794
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE BEATSON
and
SIR DAVID KEENE
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MARK Welch |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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GEOFFREY Waterworth (Executor Of The Estate Of Marjorie Waterworth, Deceased) |
Respondent |
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(Transcript of the Handed Down Judgment of
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Christopher Melton QC and Jason Wells (instructed by Slater & Gordon (UK) LLP) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 5 December 2014
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice McCombe:
(A) Introduction
(B) Background Facts
(C) The Operation and the Judge's Findings about it
"Re-do ABG
Transverse abdominal & bilateral vertical groin.
Adhesions +++
Aorta exposed. 5000 units heparin IV, clamps applied.
Left renal vein divided.
Aorta clamped below renal arteries, transected.
Distal end oversewn with 3/0 prolene.
14 x 7mm Hemashield graft anastomosed end to end to aorta with 4/0 prolene.
Limbs tunnelled to groins.
(L) [left] – End to end anastomosis to femoral bifurcation with 5/0 prolene.
(R) [right] – end to side anastomosis to hood of old graft extending into CFA with 5/0 prolene.
Excellent flow on clamp removal."
"Transverse supraumbilical and bilateral vertical groin incisions through old scars.
Very fibrotic scar tissue in groins; femoral arteries and limbs of previous graft carefully exposed.
Extensive intra-abdominal adhesions carefully divided; no 1 vicryl ties to divided omentum. Dense adhesions divided to expose old occluded aortic graft. Left renal vein ligated with no 1 vicryl and clips and divided to expose the pulsatile bit of the aorta which was then mobilised.
5000 units IV heparin, clamp applied to infrarenal aorta and aorta transected. Distal end occluded but oversewn with 3/0 prolene. Thrombo-endarterectomy of proximal end resulting in superb inflow. 14 x 7 mm Hemashield Dacron graft anastomosed end to end to aorta with 4/0 prolene. Limbs tunnelled retroperitoneally behind ureters to groins.
Clamps applied to femoral arteries; on left the old graft limb anastomosis was completely stenosed; femoral artery transected below this, spatulated into profunda. Excellent SFA and profunda backflow; hep saline flush; graft pulled to length, spatulated and anastomosed end to end with femoral bifurcation using 5/0 prolene. Excellent flow on clamp removal."
"A significant reason for accepting it [the manuscript note] as a reliable record of what Mr Welch had done would be his failure, when writing it, to recognise the significance of what he was recording and [sic: of] its reproduction, albeit in slightly different form in the later note."
"73…..It seems to me that two unknowns intrude. 1. The precise and possibly variable consistency of the atheromatous material and therefore the compressibility of a segment of aorta filled with such material, is not known; 2. Surgeons probably have limited experience of clamping across such material and thus of gauging the inhibiting effect of resistance. A further problem is that if a surgeon tries but fails to compress such material the damage may already have occurred.
74. I am not convinced that Professor Beard's demonstration proved more than that compression of an obstructed aorta was practicable. I do not accept it is proof that that could occur insensibly. Conversely, I am not convinced that the additional force necessary to compress atheromatous material, particularly the most recent deposits at the brim, would inhibit a surgeon who had decided to close a clamp. I am satisfied that Mr Welch thought he had elected to apply and compress a pulsatile segment and thus that he was not at risk of extruding material into the renal arteries. I am satisfied that the most likely rational reason for the outcome is that Mr Welch did sequence the clamping of the aorta as described in his notes and that whether that is described as a sequencing error or the compression of the aorta in a position where the radiology demonstrated that it was filled, it amounts to a negligent error which caused the relevant injury."
"30……..by clamping below the level at which these vessels intersect with the aorta. I cannot explain why the vessels became occluded so soon after the surgery, or why both vessels occluded completely simultaneously, but I am satisfied that they were not so occluded during or immediately after the operation."
(D) The Appeal and my own Conclusions
"18. The Appellant submits that if
(a) the judge was correct in his finding that the Appellant had not actually followed the appropriate sequence but had instead closed the Satinsky clamp on an occluded segment of the aorta for the first time before the thrombo-endarterectomy; and
(b) the Appellant had turned his mind to or reviewed what he had done at any time when he had an actual memory of this particular re-do ABFG
the Appellant he would inevitably have appreciated that he was making/had made a sequencing error in relation to the closure of the clamp.
19. That is because there were a number of 'alarm bells' which would inevitably have caused him to appreciate his error."
i) The sensation of clamping across an occluded portion of the aorta;
ii) The subsequent attempt to clear the blockage against a closed section of the aorta would have been noticed;
iii) The absence of the "champagne cork effect" if the aorta had been clamped above the blockage;
iv) The need consciously to open the clamp after removal of the blockage;
v) The comparative blood flow experienced after opening of the clamp: it is said that it would not have been as strong as if the blockage had departed by the sudden "champagne cork effect";
vi) Mr Welch would have realised the possibility of error when Mrs Waterworth demonstrated the symptoms that she did after the operation.
"59. It seems to me that the additional measure, supra-coeliac clamping, raises the same issues as supra-renal clamping. The more distant the proposed clamping from earlier surgery, the less likely is the presence of adhesions. Mr Welch did not consider it, because he was confident that his general approach to this type of operation provided sufficient safeguards."
"64. Given the unchallenged evidence regarding the virgin tissues where a supracoeliac clamp would be placed, the Judge's finding at paragraph 59 (B/B1/a/17/59) (the Appellant did not consider supracoeliac clamping, because he was confident that his general approach to this type of operation provided sufficient safeguards) is not consistent with his correct statements at paragraph 55 (B/B1/a/15/55) (there are no responsible body of surgeons who would not attempt to protect the renal arteries) and paragraph 58 (B/B1/a/17/58) (provided there is sufficiently safe access to the structures, slinging or clamping of the renal arteries or clamping of the aorta above the renal arteries, that is to say that the benefits outweigh the risk of any necessary dissection, one of those precautions ought to have been taken.)"
(E) Proposed Result
Sir David Keene:
Lord Justice Beatson: