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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 >> Scaddon v Morgan [2017] EWHC 1481 (QB) (16 June 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2017/1481.html Cite as: [2017] EWHC 1481 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
(sitting as a Judge of the High Court)
____________________
Lynn Scaddon |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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Phillip Morgan |
Defendant |
____________________
Jonathan Holl-Allen (instructed by Ryan) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 7-8 March 2017
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Crown Copyright ©
HHJ WORSTER:
Introduction
The Facts – pre 23 July 2010
" … the threads protrude through the cervix into the upper vagina where they are seen and felt without necessarily visualising the cervix"
I return to the question of the threads late on in this judgment.
Symptoms: vaginal bleeding for 16/52 has been seen by own gp was prescribed medication but pt could not take as pt familys has history of blood clots pt has been referred to gynaecologist apt on 12/8/2010 but today feel terrible thinks some thing may burst in her side.
23 July 2010
The handwritten note is as follows:
49 [female]
Smear 2006 N
? IUS – 15 yrs
C/o continuous PV loss
HPC for ~ 17 weeks nearly continuous PV loss
Regular up until 2 yrs ago
Then frequent
PMH COLPS/Laser – Mr Chandler
DVT x 4 when pregnant
POH Para 4 – ND x4
Allergy/ penicillin drugs nil
PA [diagram] soft
PV/PS – no threads seen
For USS – NHS
[Discharged]
The letter says this
Thank you for asking me to see this 49 year old lady with continual vaginal bleeding. Her cycles were regular up until two years ago and then her periods became quite frequent. For the last 17 weeks she has bled nearly continuously. She has had laser treatments and coloscopy in the 90s by Mr Chandler and has had four DVTs whilst pregnant. She has a coil in situ which she tells me is a Mirena coil and this was put in about 15 years ago.
She was quite tense and difficult to examine but on speculum examination I could not see the threads of the coil. I did not do a bimanual examination in view of her anxiety.
I have organised an ultrasound scan of the pelvis which will be done on the NHS as she is not insured.
Post 23 July 2010
The anteverted uterus appears normal with IUCD in situ which appears to be in a good position.
USS normal
Doesn't want GA
Write to Tim
On pelvic examination there was a large penduculated polyp extruding through the cervical os distending the endocervical canal. The polyp appeared quite haemorrhagic hence it was not suitable for outpatient procedure today. I have discussed the possibility of having this removed in theatre under spinal anaesthetic as this lady is petrified of having a general anaesthetic
Uterine cavity now obscured by a large endometrial polyp with a very large broad base attached to fundus & completely filling uterine cavity.
The Claimant was told that she would need a hysterectomy [M23]. A biopsy confirmed that the growth was benign. A hysterectomy was undertaken on 26 April 2011 from which the Claimant made an "uneventful recovery".
The Growth of the Polyp
5.4 Both experts agree that the fibroid plus stalk was 8cm; the fibroid itself was less than half of this in diameter, <4cm.
The joint report then poses this question at 5.5
How long would it have taken for the fibroid to become detectable with clinical examination.
GL will say that with an adequate examination it would have been visible on clinical examination in August 2010
PF: This depends on the rate of growth. It grew 1cm in two months and therefore may have been 1-2cm diameter in November 2010. It would only have been clinically detectable on examination once it was coming through the cervix ie when the total length was >4cm. This could have been in November 2010 assuming doubling every 4 months.
As to rate of growth, the joint report asked this:
5.2 How fast does a fibroid of this type grow? Please provide details
Both experts agree that fibroid growth is very variable. GL will add that it is however highly unlikely that the fibroid grew from being so small that it was not visible on the ultrasound of 16 August 2010 to a 8 cm lesion at the time of a hysterectomy in April 2011.
GL will say at time when Mrs Scaddon described bursting sensation on 14 July 2010
PF: November 2010.
I don't agree with that. I think that if it was 1-2cm in July 2010, for it to double or quadruple in diameter between July and November 2010 would require such a large rate of growth – that would not be compatible with a benign fibroid. Not 1-2 to 4. For it to double in 4 months, I would not agree. These doubling times are for tumour volume. The literature about [benign] fibroids suggests a growth of a third every year – the diameter would increase less than that – it would be the cube root – it is inconceivable that it would have grown that rapidly.
14 July 2010
No – bleeding and pain almost invariably occur with a uterine fibroid – a bursting feeling doesn't mean anything. But it happened around that time, and there was a prolapsed fibroid, and it doesn't seem unreasonable that it explains the situation when the fibroid burst out of the cervix.
Discussion
Causation
Quantum