Court Opinion

ID: 4636082
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2020-11-24 22:31:55.174339+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:58:28.841090
License: Public Domain

Digitally signed by
                                                                           Reporter of
                                                                           Decisions
                                                                           Reason: I attest to
                        Illinois Official Reports                          the accuracy and
                                                                           integrity of this
                                                                           document
                                Appellate Court                            Date: 2020.10.31
                                                                           13:58:13 -05'00'

                  Ackerman v. Yapp, 2020 IL App (1st) 182708

Appellate Court     NICOLE ACKERMAN, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. ROCKFORD G.
Caption             YAPP, M.D.; DIGESTIVE HEALTH SERVICES, S.C.; and
                    ADVOCATE HEALTH AND HOSPITALS CORPORATION, d/b/a
                    Advocate Good Samaritan Hospital, Defendants (Rockford G. Yapp,
                    M.D., and Digestive Health Services, S.C., Defendants-Appellees).

District & No.      First District, Fifth Division
                    No. 1-18-2708

Filed               March 13, 2020

Decision Under      Appeal from the Circuit Court of Cook County, No. 2016-L-011408;
Review              the Hon. Mary B. Minella, Judge, presiding.

Judgment            Affirmed.

Counsel on          Glen J. Dunn Jr., of Glen J. Dunn & Associates, Ltd., of Chicago, for
Appeal              appellant.

                    Julie A. Teuscher, Richard A. Barrett, and Jacquelyn Hill, of Cassiday
                    Schade LLP, of Chicago, for appellees.
     Panel                     JUSTICE ROCHFORD delivered the judgment of the court, with
                               opinion.
                               Presiding Justice Hoffman and Justice Delort concurred in the
                               judgment and opinion.

                                               OPINION

¶1        Plaintiff, Nicole Ackerman, filed a medical malpractice action against defendants,
      Rockford G. Yapp, M.D., Digestive Health Services, S.C., and Advocate Health and Hospitals
      Corporation, 1 alleging that Dr. Yapp committed medical malpractice when he perforated her
      esophagus while performing an endoscopy to remove a dental appliance that she had
      swallowed. Plaintiff contended that to repair the esophageal perforation, another surgeon
      performed a thoracotomy, in which her chest was opened and the tear was sewn up. Plaintiff
      allegedly suffered permanent injuries from the thoracotomy, which never would have
      happened had Dr. Yapp not negligently perforated her esophagus in the first place.
¶2        Plaintiff alleged that Dr. Yapp’s negligence resulted from his use of a latex hood in the
      course of the endoscopy to remove the dental appliance and that he should have used a so-
      called “overtube” instead, which would have reduced the chance of an esophageal perforation
      from occurring. Plaintiff also alleged that Dr. Yapp failed to obtain her informed consent for
      the procedure and that Digestive Health Services was vicariously liable for the actions of Dr.
      Yapp and for institutional negligence.
¶3        The jury returned a verdict in favor of defendants. On appeal, plaintiff argues that the trial
      court erred by (1) refusing to allow her expert, Dr. Marc Catalano, to demonstrate to the jury
      how an overtube could have been used to safely remove the dental appliance without
      perforating her esophagus, (2) precluding Dr. Catalano from offering causation opinions as to
      her post-surgical bowel evacuation problems, and (3) preventing Dr. Catalano from testifying
      about the permanency of her injuries. We affirm.

¶4                                         I. Pretrial Proceedings
¶5        Prior to trial, the court was informed that the dental device had been discarded, and that
      plaintiff wished to use a replica of the device for demonstrative purposes at trial and to show
      the jury that the device could have safely fit inside of an overtube and been removed from her
      body without perforating her esophagus. Defendants filed a motion in limine to bar the use of
      the replica at trial. The court denied the in limine motion and allowed plaintiff to show the jury
      the device and describe it as an “exemplar” but not as a “replica.”
¶6        Defendants also filed a motion in limine to bar Dr. Catalano’s testimony that four of
      plaintiff’s alleged injuries are permanent in nature: acid reflux, pain around the surgical site,
      constipation, and range of motion. Defendants argued in support of their motion that a
      physician may not testify to a patient’s prognosis unless his opinions are based on a recent
      examination. There was no evidence that plaintiff had been examined by any treating physician
      for more than two years prior to trial. Dr. Catalano never met or examined plaintiff; his
         1
          Advocate Health and Hospitals Corporation was voluntarily dismissed from the lawsuit after the
      motions in limine.

                                                   -2-
       opinions about her current condition and the permanency of her injuries were primarily based
       on a single telephone conversation he had with her the night before his deposition.
¶7         The trial court granted the motion in part and denied it in part, allowing evidence that
       plaintiff’s scars and acid reflux disease were permanent, but barring evidence that her range of
       motion injuries and constipation and pain around the surgical area were permanent.

¶8                                                    II. Trial
¶9          At trial, plaintiff testified that the dental device at issue was a so-called “flipper,” which fit
       in the space where she had two missing teeth. The device could be snapped in place like a
       retainer and had a clasp on the back and a wire in front and it had sharp edges. In the early
       morning on April 20, 2011, while kissing her boyfriend, the flipper became dislodged and
       passed down her throat. The next morning, plaintiff went to Good Samaritan Hospital’s
       emergency room and told the emergency room personnel that she had swallowed a dental
       appliance with sharp edges. An X-ray was taken, which was reviewed by the emergency room
       physician. He advised plaintiff that the flipper needed to be removed, and that he would send
       for a doctor who could perform the removal.
¶ 10        Dr. Yapp subsequently came into the emergency room and stated that he was the doctor
       who would perform the removal. Dr. Yapp told plaintiff that he would “go down [her] throat,”
       and “grab the [flipper] and then bring it up” through her throat. Plaintiff expressed concern that
       during the removal, she might be injured by the sharp metal on either side of the flipper. Dr.
       Yapp explained that the instrument he would use during the removal contained a hood that
       would cover the flipper to prevent it from hurting her. Plaintiff signed a consent form for the
       procedure.
¶ 11        Dr. Yapp testified that he is a gastroenterologist who has practiced for over 25 years and
       has had experience in removing hundreds of foreign bodies from patients. On April 20, 2011,
       Dr. Yapp was employed by a practice group he had founded, Digestive Health Services. Dr.
       Yapp was called to the Good Samaritan Hospital emergency room by Dr. Steven Crouch to
       see plaintiff, who had swallowed a “dangerous device.” Dr. Yapp reviewed the abdominal X-
       ray, which revealed a device with a “very long and torturous wire” in plaintiff’s stomach.
¶ 12        Dr. Yapp spoke with plaintiff and obtained a description from her as to the “size and
       complexity and the danger of this device.” Plaintiff informed him that the device was a flipper,
       which was a “large dental inserted plate that had two teeth and wires connected to it to help
       hold it in place.” Dr. Yapp discussed different options with plaintiff. One option was to do
       nothing, which current medical literature recommended against because the flipper could travel
       into the small bowel and cause a “complication.” Dr. Yapp also discussed the possibility of
       surgery with plaintiff.
¶ 13        Dr. Yapp recommended removal of the flipper through her esophagus endoscopically. Dr.
       Yapp explained that the endoscopic procedure contained a risk of perforation of the esophagus.
       Plaintiff agreed to the endoscopic procedure.
¶ 14        Dr. Yapp performed an esophagogastroduodenoscopy (EGD) on plaintiff. Dr. Yapp’s
       initial approach or “pass” into plaintiff’s stomach was by way of the endoscope, which has a
       camera and a light at its tip that gives the physician visibility as to the contents of the stomach.
       On the first pass, Dr. Yapp saw the flipper in plaintiff’s stomach and took two pictures of it
       with the camera at the tip of the endoscope. Dr. Yapp saw that the flipper posed a danger to

                                                      -3-
       plaintiff as it had multiple sharp edges and “a wire almost like a fishhook.” The flipper was
       over two and a half centimeters in length, meaning that it would be difficult to remove. Dr.
       Yapp believed that the best way to remove the flipper without harming plaintiff was to utilize
       a bell-shaped, latex hood, about five centimeters in diameter, that would cover the flipper
       during its removal from plaintiff’s body.
¶ 15        Dr. Yapp withdrew the endoscope from the initial pass and fit the hood over the scope. Dr.
       Yapp reinserted the endoscope, utilized a snare to stabilize it, and pulled the flipper completely
       into the hood. Dr. Yapp then pulled the endoscope and attached hood up the upper esophageal
       sphincter and out plaintiff’s mouth and successfully retrieved the flipper.
¶ 16        Dr. Yapp identified plaintiff’s Exhibit Nos. 6, 7, and 8 as photographs of the flipper he
       removed from plaintiff. Plaintiff was permitted to publish Exhibit No. 7 to the jury.
¶ 17        After Dr. Yapp performed the EGD on plaintiff, her subsequent treating surgeon, Dr.
       Schwartz, found a three-centimeter laceration, located just above the lower esophageal
       sphincter. Dr. Yapp testified as follows regarding the laceration of the esophagus:
                    “Q. Can you tell us which way the esophagus turns—
                    A. The lower esophageal sphincter is a *** circumferential muscle [that] holds the
                esophagus closed. The shape of the stomach, there is a slight curve that pushes on one
                side of the sphincter and the other side of the sphincter. So it’s not completely
                symmetrical. ***
                    Q. And so that curve right above the lower esophageal sphincter, that adds what
                you might call a degree of difficulty to the removal of the sharp—
                    A. And complexity, correct.
                    Q. Complexity because it is an area, whereas you navigate the endoscope and the
                foreign object, they both have to turn with the esophagus otherwise there could be
                laceration and perforation?
                    A. It’s high risk.
                    Q. And it’s in that area where [plaintiff] was lacerated and punctured?
                    A. In that area, yes.”
¶ 18        Dr. Schwartz subsequently performed a thoracotomy, in which he opened plaintiff’s chest
       and sewed up the tear in her esophagus.
¶ 19        Dr. Yapp was shown plaintiff’s Exhibit No. 25, which he identified as an esophageal
       overtube, a piece of equipment that can be used during an endoscopy. An overtube has a
       number of uses, including to protect a patient’s airway during the removal of a foreign object,
       and protecting the mucosal lining of the esophagus. The standard diameter of the overtube is
       1.67 centimeters. The overtube has a flexible distal tip that allows for “stable passage into the
       patient.” Plaintiff was permitted to publish the sample overtube to the jurors so that they could
       see it and touch it.
¶ 20        Plaintiff questioned Dr. Yapp as to whether he agreed that the flexible distal tip of the
       overtube would allow objects larger than 1.67 centimeters (such as the flipper) to be pulled
       inside the overtube. Dr. Yapp disagreed, stating that it would have been “dangerous” to try to
       pull the flipper into the distal tip of the overtube. After seeing the size of the flipper, which
       was measured at 2.0 by 1.7 by 0.3 centimeters, Dr. Yapp determined that the flipper would not
       fit inside a standard overtube. Dr. Yapp decided that pulling the flipper into the latex hood was
       the safest way to extract it from plaintiff. Dr. Yapp noted that the latex hood was “clearly made

                                                   -4-
       for larger devices,” such as the flipper here. Had he used the overtube, “it’s possible [the
       flipper] could have gotten stuck and then [he] would really be in a difficult shape.” In Dr.
       Yapp’s opinion, he complied with the standard of care in his treatment of plaintiff.
¶ 21       Dr. Marc Catalano testified as plaintiff’s expert in gastroenterology. Dr. Catalano was
       shown plaintiff’s Exhibit No. 25, which was an overtube that can be used to help remove a
       foreign object from the patient’s stomach. Dr. Catalano described the distal tip of the overtube
       as “very pliable,” such that it can be torqued and stretched in multiple different directions,
       longitudinally and radially, allowing for the “capturing of much larger objects than can
       otherwise be accommodated.”
¶ 22       Dr. Catalano opined that the standard of care required Dr. Yapp to use a 50-centimeter
       overtube to safely remove the flipper from inside plaintiff’s stomach. Dr. Catalano explained
       that the only thing that can protect the esophagus from a large, sharp edged object such as the
       flipper is an overtube “that would encircle the entire esophagus.”
¶ 23       Dr. Catalano was shown plaintiff’s Exhibit No. 20, which was the exemplar flipper. 2 The
       exemplar contained two teeth, a molar and a premolar, with two metal protruding wires, one
       more curved than the other. The exemplar was longer than the actual flipper swallowed by
       plaintiff; according to Dr. Catalano, the actual flipper was 2.0 centimeters in length, whereas
       the exemplar was 2.3 centimeters in length. Plaintiff requested that Dr. Catalano be allowed to
       manually manipulate the exemplar into the distal tip of the overtube in front of the jury, so as
       to demonstrate that the actual flipper swallowed by plaintiff (which was smaller than the
       exemplar) would have also fit inside of the overtube. The trial court denied plaintiff’s request,
       finding that the proposed demonstration, in which Dr. Catalano would use his hands to
       manipulate the exemplar into the distal tip of the overtube, was not allowable because it was
       too dissimilar to the actual circumstances faced by Dr. Yapp during the EGD he performed on
       plaintiff, when he utilized an endoscope (not his hands) to pull the flipper out of her stomach.
¶ 24       The court permitted Dr. Catalano to draw a diagram to aid the jury in understanding his
       testimony. Dr. Catalano drew the diagram of the esophagus, diaphragm, and stomach and
       explained how the esophagus includes the lower esophageal sphincter, which is a complex
       muscle inside the stomach. Dr. Catalano explained that the sharp edges of the flipper posed a
       danger of perforating the esophagus during its removal, especially because the surgeon’s vision
       during the endoscopy is limited and because the esophagus is curved, requiring some deft
       maneuvering by the surgeon. In Dr. Catalano’s opinion, the standard of care for removing the
       flipper without damaging the esophagus was to pull the flipper into the distal tip of the
       50-centimeter esophageal overtube and then to extract the overtube from the body.
¶ 25       Plaintiff sought to question Dr. Catalano about his opinion that plaintiff suffers permanent
       constipation and pain caused by the thoracotomy that was performed to repair the esophageal
       perforation negligently caused by Dr. Yapp. The trial court refused to allow Dr. Catalano to so
       testify, finding that he had no reasonable basis to support his opinion regarding the cause and
       permanency of plaintiff’s injuries.
¶ 26       Dr. Peter Kahrilas testified as an expert in gastroenterology for defendants. Dr. Kahrilas
       has experience removing sharp objects from patients’ stomachs, including a razor blade that

          2
           The actual flipper swallowed by plaintiff and the exemplar flipper were made the same way using
       a mold of plaintiff’s mouth.

                                                    -5-
       he removed via a latex hood fitted over the end of an endoscope. The purpose of the latex hood
       is to protect the lining of the esophagus from the sharp object contained within.
¶ 27        Dr. Kahrilas identified plaintiff’s Exhibit No. 25 as an overtube. Dr. Kahrilas explained
       that the primary purpose of an overtube is to prevent asphyxiation from occurring during an
       endoscopic procedure, by allowing the doctor to remove small objects such as food particles
       so as to prevent them from falling into the trachea and choking the patient.
¶ 28        Dr. Kahrilas opined that Dr. Yapp’s decision to remove the flipper by an endoscopy using
       a latex hood, as opposed to an overtube, was within the standard of care because the flipper
       would not have fit inside the overtube.
¶ 29        Dr. John Losurdo testified as an expert in gastroenterology and interventional endoscopy
       on behalf of defendants. Dr. Losurdo has removed dental appliances such as dentures and
       partials from patients in the past, but he had never before removed a flipper such as the one
       plaintiff here swallowed. Dr. Losurdo noted that the flipper was irregularly shaped and was
       too large and too long to be pulled into an overtube. Dr. Losurdo opined that Dr. Yapp complied
       with the standard of care by removing the flipper by an endoscopy using a latex hood, as
       opposed to an overtube.
¶ 30        Following all the evidence, the jury returned a verdict in favor of defendants. Plaintiff filed
       a posttrial motion, arguing that the trial court erred by (1) refusing her request to have her
       expert, Dr. Catalano, demonstrate to the jury that the exemplar would fit inside of the distal tip
       of the overtube and (2) precluding Dr. Catalano from testifying that plaintiff’s bowel issues
       and pain complaints were permanent and could have been caused by the thoracotomy
       procedure necessitated by Dr. Yapp’s negligence. The trial court denied plaintiff’s posttrial
       motion. Plaintiff appeals.

¶ 31                                                III. Analysis
¶ 32        First, plaintiff argues that the trial court erred in denying her posttrial motion for a new trial
       based on the court’s refusal to allow Dr. Catalano to demonstrate to the jury that he could
       manually fit the exemplar into the distal tip of the overtube. We review the denial of plaintiff’s
       posttrial motion for an abuse of discretion. Stamp v. Sylvan, 391 Ill. App. 3d 117, 123 (2009).
       The court’s decision as to whether or not to allow a courtroom demonstration is also reviewed
       for an abuse of discretion. People v. Oliver, 306 Ill. App. 3d 59, 73 (1999).
¶ 33        “In deciding whether the trial court abused its discretion reviewing courts look ‘primarily
       to whether the demonstration is probative of facts in issue and whether it is conducted under
       substantially similar conditions and circumstances as those which surrounded the original
       occurrence.’ ” Id. at 73-74 (quoting People v. Harp, 193 Ill. App. 3d 838, 843 (1990)).
¶ 34        The trial court here found that the proposed courtroom demonstration by Dr. Catalano was
       not substantially similar to the conditions and circumstances surrounding the EGD performed
       by Dr. Yapp on plaintiff. In denying plaintiff’s posttrial motion, the trial court elaborated on
       its findings:
                     “Plaintiff prepared a video of a retrieval of an exemplar device using an overtube,
                which was shown, to the court and parties, outside the presence of the jury. In the video,
                the demonstration retrieval of an exemplar flipper using an overtube procedure was
                carried out horizontally, on a flat table, and the exemplar was manually drawn towards
                the overtube. No one was viewing the retrieval through an endoscope, the exemplar

                                                      -6-
                was not inside an actual person’s stomach, and the individual was demonstrating the
                retrieval while standing next to the table with the exemplar and device lying flat on the
                table.
                    Dr. Catalano, himself, demonstrated to the court what he intended to demonstrate
                to the jury, without the video. The court had to remind Dr. Catalano more than once, to
                refrain from pushing the exemplar flipper into the distal port of the overtube with his
                fingers. *** This was because Dr. Catalano, by using his fingers, was in effect applying
                force to secure the exemplar in the overtube. This type of force to the flipper would and
                could not be used in the actual procedure, since the physician’s hand would not be in
                the patient’s stomach. There was no showing that the amount of force generated by a
                person pushing the exemplar into the distal end of the overtube could be duplicated by
                a person manipulating equipment inside an endoscope, inside a person under sedation,
                and possibly with limited ability to generate force, and limited visibility.
                    The overall effect of the demonstration by Dr. Catalano was, in this court’s opinion,
                to make the retrieval using the overtube, look deceptively easy. The demonstration by
                Dr. Catalano was not at all similar to the actual circumstance encountered by Dr. Yapp,
                while he was manipulating the endoscope and retrieval equipment including a hood
                located inside a patient’s throat and stomach, with restricted visibility.”
¶ 35        The court noted that it had allowed Dr. Catalano to “discuss his theory of the case and to
       draw diagrams before the jury that illustrated his theory of using an overtube to retrieve the
       flipper swallowed by [plaintiff].” The exemplar and the overtube were shown to the jury, as
       visual aids, during Dr. Catalano’s testimony. However, the court found that “[t]he
       demonstration retrieval using an overtube and an exemplar was properly banned *** since it
       did not meet the ‘substantially similar’ requirement ***. Exclusion of this demonstration does
       not warrant granting plaintiff’s motion for a new trial.”
¶ 36        The trial court was correct in finding that Dr. Catalano’s proposed demonstration was not
       substantially similar to Dr. Yapp’s actual procedure performed on plaintiff, where Dr. Yapp
       utilized an endoscope to withdraw the flipper into a latex hood and out her mouth, while Dr.
       Catalano planned to force the exemplar into the distal tip of the overtube with his hands instead
       of with an endoscope; Dr. Yapp withdrew the flipper from plaintiff’s stomach past the
       esophageal sphincter, where the esophagus made a significant turn, while Dr. Catalano’s
       demonstration would take place on a flat table outside of an actual person’s stomach; and
       Dr. Yapp had limited visibility due to the placement of the flipper inside plaintiff’s stomach,
       whereas Dr. Catalano would face no similar visibility restrictions during his demonstration.
       Accordingly, the trial court committed no abuse of discretion in refusing to allow Dr.
       Catalano’s courtroom demonstration and in denying plaintiff’s posttrial motion.
¶ 37        Plaintiff also argues that, even if Dr. Catalano’s demonstration was properly excluded, the
       trial court abused its discretion by failing to allow Dr. Catalano to testify to the diameter of the
       distal tip of the overtube. Plaintiff argues that such testimony would have informed the jury
       that the flipper could have fit inside the distal tip and would have supported her theory that Dr.
       Yapp was negligent for failing to utilize an overtube when retrieving the flipper from her
       stomach.
¶ 38        Review of the record belies plaintiff’s argument, as Dr. Catalano specifically testified that
       the diameter of the overtube is two centimeters and that the distal tip “expands to two, two-
       and-a-half centimeters or more” and can “accommodate objects that are twice the size” of the

                                                    -7-
       tip. Thus, Dr. Catalano was not precluded from testifying to plaintiff’s theory of the case; he
       was, however, precluded from giving a demonstration under circumstances that were not
       substantially similar to the circumstances faced by Dr. Yapp when he performed the EGD on
       plaintiff. As discussed, the trial court committed no abuse of discretion in so preventing such
       a dissimilar demonstration from being performed in front of the jury.
¶ 39        Next, plaintiff argues that the trial court erred in denying her posttrial motion for a new
       trial based on the court’s refusal to allow Dr. Catalano to give his opinion that plaintiff’s
       constipation and pain around her surgical site was permanent and could have resulted from the
       thoracotomy procedure that was performed to repair the esophageal perforation negligently
       caused by Dr. Yapp. To lay an adequate foundation for expert testimony, plaintiff must
       establish that the witness qualifies as an expert “by knowledge, skill, experience, training, or
       education.” Ill. R. Evid. 702 (eff. Jan. 1, 2011). Plaintiff must also establish that the information
       on which the expert bases his opinion is reliable. People v. Simmons, 2016 IL App (1st)
       131300, ¶ 115. The information is reliable if “it is ‘of a type reasonably relied upon by experts
       in the particular field in forming opinions or inferences upon the subject.’ ” Id. (quoting Ill. R.
       Evid. 703 (eff. Jan. 1, 2011)).
¶ 40        In the present case, the trial court found such reliability lacking in Dr. Catalano’s opinions
       about the cause and permanency of plaintiff’s injuries. The court noted that Dr. Catalano is not
       a cardiothoracic surgeon and does not perform thoracotomies; instead, he is a
       gastroenterologist. Dr. Catalano had a one-hour phone conversation with plaintiff the day
       before his deposition, reviewed Dr. Yapp’s two depositions and Dr. Schwartz’s deposition,
       and examined plaintiff’s medical records prior to formulating his opinions. None of the
       deposition testimony or medical records indicated that plaintiff’s continuing pain and
       constipation were definitively caused by the thoracotomy performed on her more than five
       years ago or that they were permanent. Further, Dr. Catalano never examined plaintiff, never
       viewed her surgical scar, and never consulted with her treating physicians. In fact, no treating
       physician had examined plaintiff for more than two years prior to trial, meaning that no recent
       medical information about her constipation and pain around the surgical site was even
       available.
¶ 41        The trial court found that without any expertise in performing thoracotomies and without
       performing an examination of plaintiff or reviewing a medical record of a recent examination,
       Dr. Catalano lacked information reasonably relied on by experts in the field to form an opinion
       about whether the thoracotomy caused plaintiff’s continuing constipation and pain and whether
       such conditions were permanent. The trial court committed no abuse of discretion in so finding
       and in barring Dr. Catalano from testifying about the causation and permanency of plaintiff’s
       injuries.
¶ 42        Plaintiff argues, though, that Dr. Catalano would have testified that plaintiff’s continuing
       constipation and pain could or might have been caused by the thoracotomy, which meets the
       “might or could” standard set forth in Mesick v. Johnson, 141 Ill. App. 3d 195 (1986), Geers
       v. Brichta, 248 Ill. App. 3d 398 (1993), and Iaccino v. Anderson, 406 Ill. App. 3d 397 (2010).
       In Mesick, Geers, and Iaccino, the appellate court held that “a physician may testify to what
       might or could have caused an injury despite any objection that the testimony is inconclusive.”
       Mesick, 141 Ill. App. 3d at 205-06; Geers, 248 Ill. App. 3d at 407; Iaccino, 406 Ill. App. 3d at
       407.

                                                     -8-
¶ 43       However, a physician may testify to what might or could have caused an injury only so
       long as the facts upon which he bases his opinion are of a type reasonably relied on by experts
       in the particular field. Iaccino, 406 Ill. App. 3d at 407. In Mesick and Geers, the physicians’
       causation testimony was based on their examinations of the respective plaintiffs (see Mesick,
       141 Ill. App. 3d at 206; Geers, 248 Ill. App. 3d at 408); in Iaccino, the physician’s causation
       testimony was based on his review of recent placental slides and medical records, which the
       appellate court deemed were sources of information reasonably relied on by pediatric
       pathologists to support their medical opinions. Iaccino, 406 Ill. App. 3d at 407. By contrast, in
       the present case, Dr. Catalano never examined plaintiff nor reviewed any recent medical
       records concerning her constipation and pain, and thus the trial court committed no abuse of
       discretion in finding that Dr. Catalano had no reliable basis for his causation opinion, and in
       barring his causation testimony.
¶ 44       For all the foregoing reasons, we affirm the circuit court.

¶ 45      Affirmed.

                                                   -9-