In a tragic incident at Ascension Sacred Heart Emerald Coast Hospital in Florida, an Alabama man, William Bryan, died after a surgeon mistakenly removed his liver instead of his spleen during a procedure.
This grave error has left Bryan’s family devastated and has raised serious concerns about surgical safety and competence at the facility.
Bryan, 70, was vacationing in the Florida Panhandle when he experienced severe lower left abdominal pain.
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Concerned about his symptoms, he and his wife, Beverly, sought medical help at the hospital, which is located between Pensacola and Panama City.
After initial examinations, doctors identified an abnormality in his spleen and recommended further testing.
The family’s attorney stated that Dr. Thomas Shaknovsky, a general surgeon, and Dr. Christopher Bacani, the Chief Medical Officer, advised Bryan to undergo emergency surgery.
They warned him that delaying the procedure could lead to serious complications. Trusting their professional judgment, Bryan agreed to the surgery.
However, what was supposed to be a routine operation turned into a fatal mistake. During the surgery, Dr. Shaknovsky erroneously removed Bryan’s liver, mistakenly identifying it as the spleen.
This catastrophic error led to “immediate and catastrophic blood loss resulting in death,” according to Zarzaur Law P.A., the firm representing the Bryan family.
Adding to the family’s shock and grief, the surgeon allegedly informed Beverly Bryan post-surgery that her husband’s “spleen” was unusually enlarged and had migrated to the opposite side of his body.
This statement was reportedly made in an attempt to justify the unexpected turn of events during the operation. However, it was later confirmed that the organ removed was indeed Bryan’s liver, not his spleen.
In a typical human anatomy, the liver is situated on the upper right side of the abdominal cavity, below the diaphragm and above other organs like the stomach, right kidney, and intestines.
The spleen, conversely, is located on the upper left side of the abdomen, next to the stomach. The spleen is significantly smaller than the liver, weighing between 2.4 to 3 pounds less and is approximately the size of a fist.
This is not the first time Dr. Shaknovsky has faced allegations of performing incorrect surgeries. Zarzaur Law claims that he was previously involved in a “wrong-site surgery” last year, where he mistakenly removed a portion of a patient’s pancreas instead of performing an intended adrenal gland resection. That case was settled out of court, with the terms undisclosed.
Beverly Bryan, seeking justice for her husband, has retained Zarzaur Law to pursue both a lawsuit and a criminal investigation against Dr. Shaknovsky and the hospital.
“My husband died while helpless on the operating room table by Dr. Shaknovsky. I don’t want anyone else to die due to his incompetence at a hospital that should have known or knew he had previously made drastic, life-altering surgical mistakes,” she stated.
In response to the incident, North Walton Doctor’s Hospital has “disassociated” itself from Dr. Shaknovsky and removed all references to him from its website.
Meanwhile, Ascension Sacred Heart Emerald Coast Hospital has announced that it is conducting a thorough investigation into Bryan’s death, emphasizing that patient safety remains their top priority.
“We take allegations like this very seriously, and our leadership team is performing a thorough investigation into this event,” the hospital stated.
The medical examiner’s report following Bryan’s death discovered a small cyst on his spleen, which is believed to have been the cause of the pain that led him to seek medical attention initially.
This finding only deepens the tragedy, as the misdiagnosis and surgical error led to an unnecessary and fatal operation.
As the investigation continues, the Bryan family and the broader community await answers and hope for measures to prevent such tragic mistakes from occurring again in the future.
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Let’s call it a cyst. WHY the emergency surgery then? Or is this another case of St. Vincent’s chain of hospitals smelling money and going after it? Still, how do you confuse the two even IF it was moved or larger than normal. You have to handle the thing, pick it up, move stuff around to get ready to cut and remove it,didn’t it click that hey.. this things connected weird for a spleen?
Wow, that’s an unbelievably difficult mistake to make. There should have been imaging ahead of the surgery, a CT scan, ultrasound, and/or MRI showing any anatomy variants and the cyst. Then there is the different appearance of liver and spleen intraoperatively, different anatomy and vasculature of the spleen and liver, and usually a different approach to a splenectomy vs. hepatectomy. A spleen cyst usually doesn’t cause pain and is not an emergency. The entire case doesn’t add up and likely represents a series of errors.
and he should have seen that the gall bladder and bile ducts are located by the liver and nowhere near a spleen.
Doctors , as we can see after the Fake Civid , but real Planned Medical Scam to inject healthy humans with untested mRNA injections , will kill as many people as the Globalist Controlled governments want them to , as long as they get PAID .
Pretty much DONE with “organized” medicine. We have the tech and info today to avoid 99.9% of al health “issues” with a simple task of prevention.
And not anyone present on the surgical team questioned this? Hey, dude! That’s the wrong organ!
OMG! A first year nursing student knows where the organs are located in a human being!