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The cases in this column are selected by the editors of The Journal of Family Practice from Medical Malpractice: Verdicts, Settlements & Experts, with permission of the editor, Lewis Laska (https://www.triplelpublications.com/product/medical-malpractice-newsletter/). The information about the cases presented here is sometimes incomplete; pertinent details of a given situation therefore may be unavailable. Moreover, the cases may or may not have merit. Nevertheless, these cases represent the types of clinical situations that typically result in litigation.
Severe headache, but no CT scan results in death
A HOSPITALIZED 57-YEAR-OLD MAN complained of a severe headache that he described as a 10 on a scale of 1 to 10. At the time, he was taking warfarin. After 6 days, he died from a brain herniation and hemorrhage.
PLAINTIFF’S CLAIM Despite the patient’s complaint of severe headache, the physician failed to order a computed tomography scan of the head.
THE DEFENSE The patient’s headaches had waxed and waned and were associated with a fever of recent onset. There were no focal neurologic deficits to suggest that there was any problem with the brain. The brain hemorrhage was a sudden and acute event.
VERDICT $250,000 Illinois verdict.
COMMENT Have a high index of suspicion for intracranial hemorrhage in patients taking warfarin with severe headache. What more needs to be said?