Abstract
IntroductionSpine surgery is one of the specialties with the highest medicolegal risk, with a legal action initiated every 17 months per practitioner. One of the most dreaded complications is an epidural hematoma with postoperative deficit. The treatment of this complication is still being debated. We therefore conducted a retrospective study of the database of a medical liability insurer to assess perioperative factors determining the liability of the surgeon or paramedical team during an expert review in the event of a postoperative symptomatic epidural hematoma. HypothesisTo identify the factors determining the liability of the medical team in the event of a postoperative symptomatic epidural hematoma. Materials and MethodsWe retrospectively analyzed the largest French register of medicolegal expert reviews between 2011 and 2018. We identified 68 cases by entering the following keywords in this database: “spine surgery,” “complications,” and “epidural hematoma.” After a thorough review of each case, only 14 were deemed to be truly relevant to our study. We collected for each patient the perioperative data, complications (including neurologic deficits) and their clinical course. ResultsOnly one surgeon was accused and found liable for failing to perform a surgical revision within a reasonable timeframe (time to revision of 11 days). In 2 cases, the liability of a nurse working in the surgical department was called into question for failing to contact the surgeon upon the onset of symptoms. In the other cases (11 patients, 79%), the occurrence of a symptomatic epidural hematoma was considered a no-fault medical accident that was not caused by the surgeon. The presence of a drain did not have any medicolegal impact in the cases reviewed. ConclusionThe key element in medicolegal decisions is the reaction time of the healthcare teams, in particular the time between the onset of symptoms and surgical revision. According to these expert reviews, the placement of a drain was not taken into consideration during the medicolegal assessment of a postoperative symptomatic epidural hematoma. Level of EvidenceII; retrospective prognostic study, investigation of patient characteristics and their impact on functional outcome.
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More From: Orthopaedics & Traumatology: Surgery & Research
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