Failure to timely diagnose femur fracture

Presentation
A 28-year-old man was involved in a motorcycle collision, sustaining multiple injuries. The man hit the side of a trailer and was thrown off his motorcycle.

The EMS records reflect that the patient’s chief complaint at the scene of the accident was leg pain. The presumptive diagnosis from the EMS operators was possible leg injury with loss of consciousness. The patient’s size (6’2” and greater than 300 pounds) prohib­ited EMS from being able to fit him with a cervical collar.

The patient was taken to the emergency department (ED) at a Level 1 trauma center. He was evaluated by an emergency medicine physician, two trauma surgeons, and Orthope­dic Surgeon A. The following film studies were obtained: pelvic x-ray; chest x-ray; CT scan of the chest, abdomen, and pelvis; follow-up chest x-ray; CT scan of the cervical spine; CT scan of the head; x-ray of the right knee; and x-rays of the lumbar spine. Notably absent in the list of film studies was film of the femurs.

The patient was diagnosed with contusions, acute back pain, rib fractures shown on x-ray, and a sprained right knee. He was discharged later that day and directed to see the ortho­pedic surgeon in his clinic for follow up.
 

Physician action
Two days later, the patient saw Orthopedic Surgeon B for his knee sprain. Orthopedic Sur­geon B did not have privileges within the system affiliated with the Level 1 trauma center. Therefore, he did not have access to the patient’s trauma center chart or the radiographic studies.

The patient came to Orthopedic Surgeon B wearing a knee brace, which was removed for the examination. Orthopedic Surgeon B focused the exam on the right knee, but the exam was limited due to patient discomfort and the size of the patient’s leg. Orthopedic Surgeon B recommended an MRI and diagnosed an acute sprain with a possible non-displaced fracture of the right knee. The patient never reported thigh or leg pain.

The MRI was performed the next day, but it did not extend high enough to detect a frac­ture of the femur.

Orthopedic Surgeon B saw the patient six weeks later for follow up. The patient was con­tinuing to perform home exercises, and he was increasing his weight bearing status and ambulation. He was next seen two weeks later, at which time Orthopedic Surgeon B wrote a prescription for outpatient physical therapy to work on range-of-motion and quadriceps strengthening. He recommended that the patient use a cane, not his crutches, to assist with ambulation. Physical therapists worked with the patient for seven months for a total of 75 visits.

Nine months after first coming to Orthopedic Surgeon B, the patient indicated that he could feel a large, firm mass in his right thigh. Orthopedic surgeon B obtained x-rays that revealed evidence of a femur fracture. The fracture was located in the mid-shaft and had developed a great deal of callus formation as the bones overlaid each other. This caused the right leg to be shorter than the left leg.

Orthopedic Surgeon B referred the patient to Orthopedic Surgeon C, who specialized in abnormal bone cases often associated with orthopedic oncology. Orthopedic Surgeon C performed the following procedures: resect the callous formation; realign the femur; remove open reduction and internal fixation hardware; and place an expandable nail. The patient missed little time from work during this process and continued to work as a high school baseball coach.


Allegations
A lawsuit was filed alleging that the emergency medicine physician and Orthopedic Sur­geon B failed to timely diagnose and treat the femur fracture. The patient claimed that the delay in treatment necessitated an extended healing process, multiple surgeries, subse­quent infections, and prolonged pain.


Legal implications
Two orthopedic surgeons reviewed this case for the defense. Each expressed concern about the delay in diagnosis. The plaintiff retained an orthopedic surgeon and an emer­gency medicine physician who criticized the delay in diagnosis and treatment, as well as the ED physician’s failure to diagnose the fractured femur.


Disposition
The case was settled on behalf of Orthopedic Surgeon B.


Risk management considerations
Orthopedic Surgeon B did not request the medical records or imaging studies from the trauma center. Relying on the patient to convey the findings from emergency and trauma physicians, as well as a series of imaging studies can be problematic. Even if a physician suspects an injury beyond the chief complaint, he or she may have believed “everything else was normal” without knowing what was actually imaged. If physicians cannot view electronic records and images remotely, they should consider requesting the records.

When following a patient involved in a trauma, a thorough exam and review of systems may be indicated for the initial exam. Complete documentation of each patient encounter is important, including reports of pain or symptoms the patient may have beyond the primary focus of the injury.

One of the defense experts stated that the first exam could have involved measuring both legs and palpating and thoroughly examining the entire injured leg. If an exam did not reveal the injury, it would have made the physician’s care more defensible. Ordering the appropriate films to augment the exam may also have identified the fractured femur. The defense expert added that the patient’s abnormally slow progress may have been a red flag that should have alerted the physician and led to an earlier diagnosis of the fracture.

 

About the Author

Laura Hale Brockway is the Vice President of Marketing at TMLT. She can be reached at laura-brockway@tmlt.org.

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