Dentist's drill bit lodged in patient's sinus cavity........

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Golden Member
Jul 22, 2003
1,270
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SYRACUSE, N.Y. ? A dentist who was dancing to the song "Car Wash" while extracting a patient's tooth lost an inch-long drill bit, which punctured the patient's sinus cavity and came to rest by her eye socket, according to the woman's lawsuit.

Brandy Fanning, 31, underwent surgery at a hospital after the dentist, Dr. George Trusty, was unable to retrieve the bit, said Fanning's lawyer, Joseph Cote III. He said Fanning spent three days at the hospital, with a steady drip of intravenous morphine.

Fanning had gone to the emergency dental clinic at Syracuse Community Health Center in October 2004 after pain in a molar worsened. Trusty gave her novocaine and while he was drilling to break the molar into quadrants before the extraction, Fanning heard a snap.

During the procedure, the lawsuit said, Trusty was "performing rhythmical steps and movements to the song 'Car Wash,' " which was on the radio in the dental suite.

Trusty then used a metal hook to try to pull the bit out, but that only pushed it farther up, driving it through the sinus and bone, the lawsuit says.

Trusty's efforts to remove the bit gouged and scraped the inside of Fanning's sinus cavity and widened the hole where the bit entered, Cote said.

When Fanning asked what was happening, Trusty told her it wasn't a big deal and that she'd likely sneeze the drill bit out, she said.

She expressed alarm and he offered to call an oral surgeon who was a friend and get her an appointment for two days later, Fanning said. Trusty made the call in front of Fanning.

When he got off the phone, she said, he told her she needed to get to an emergency room immediately. The dentist then gave her an extra shot of novocaine in case she had to wait to see a doctor, she said.

Trusty, 57, reached at the health center, would not comment on the case, nor would he say how long he'd been a dentist at the health center.

According to the state Education Department, which handles the licensing of dentists, Trusty has no complaints against him and his license is valid.

In Trusty's notes after the procedure, he wrote, "Informed patient surgical burr was lost in sinuses."

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Skull X-rays taken at University Hospital's emergency room show "a 2.5 cm linear metallic object in the left maxillary sinus," Dr. Precha Emko wrote in his hospital notes.

Emko, an ophthalmologist and an oral surgeon all performed the surgery the following day, using the Caldwell-Luc procedure, which bores a hole in the upper gum to access the inside of the face.

They had to use a chisel to break into the sinus wall, then cauterize that part of the sinus down to the bone, according to University Hospital records.

Fanning, who works for Verizon and is the mother of three boys, said doctors told her later that if she had sneezed with the bit still inside, she could have blinded her left eye.

Since the surgery, she has suffered facial swelling, nerve damage and has chronic infections because of bacteria that seep into her sinus cavity, she said.

She filed the lawsuit in federal court last month.


http://seattletimes.nwsource.c...3991245_dentist03.html
 

Cyco

Diamond Member
Jan 15, 2002
4,231
173
106
Well, Car Wash does have that effect on you.
Still....ouch!!!
 

Goosemaster

Lifer
Apr 10, 2001
48,775
3
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:music:Some of the work gets kinda hard
This ain't no place to be
If you planned on bein' a star
Let me tell you it's always cool
And the boss don't mind sometimes
If ya act the fool:music:

*bass solo*


:music:
At the car wash...
Workin' at the car wash, girl:music:
 

skace

Lifer
Jan 23, 2001
14,488
7
81
Yo I've got a friend who will fix that in like 2-3 days, heres some painkillers to tide you over.

WHAT?!
 

Vette73

Lifer
Jul 5, 2000
21,503
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Originally posted by: moshquerade
Originally posted by: lokiju
Thats horrible!

:(

Yes it is. :(

I wonder why she waited 3 years to file a suit.

She mighty have been in talks with his insurance but they don;t pay until you are 100% or get a notice that you can;t be 100%. 3 years might be the statue of limitations for that state so she had to file now.
 
Mar 11, 2004
23,444
5,850
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I think I would've taken his drill and shoved it down his throat. "Oh, you'll just sneeze that out." *Gives another shot of Novacaine* "BTW, you need to get to an emergency room immediately. Have a nice day."
 

warmodder

Senior member
Nov 1, 2007
553
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How did the bit pop off the drill? It also seems kind of odd that he would use that little scraper doohickey and the bit would start drilling inside of her head...

Something's fishy here...
 

moshquerade

No Lifer
Nov 1, 2001
61,504
12
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Originally posted by: warmodder
How did the bit pop off the drill? It also seems kind of odd that he would use that little scraper doohickey and the bit would start drilling inside of her head...

Something's fishy here...

defective bit? it went flying off, and he tried to retrieve it and made it worse?

 

RichUK

Lifer
Feb 14, 2005
10,341
678
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When Fanning asked what was happening, Trusty told her it wasn't a big deal and that she'd likely sneeze the drill bit out, she said.

:Q :laugh:
 

OutHouse

Lifer
Jun 5, 2000
36,410
616
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how did that reporter get access to the dentist and doctors notes? arent those covered under HIPPA?
 

manowar821

Diamond Member
Mar 1, 2007
6,063
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Originally posted by: Citrix
how did that reporter get access to the dentist and doctors notes? arent those covered under HIPPA?

Are you allowed to give up info about your visits and such if you choose to, under HIPPA?
 

grohl

Platinum Member
Jun 27, 2004
2,849
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Originally posted by: Citrix
how did that reporter get access to the dentist and doctors notes? arent those covered under HIPPA?

I think after a civil suit and discovery motions are filed that HIPPA no longer applies. Also maybe something to do with lawsuits becoming part of the public record.