When a Newborn’s First Breath Shouldn’t Be a Fight for Life
One of the most frightening emergencies in the delivery room is meconium aspiration—when a baby inhales a mixture of amniotic fluid and meconium (the infant’s first feces) before or during birth.
This condition is a red flag for fetal distress and can cause respiratory failure, infection, and permanent brain injury if not treated immediately.
At Petrucelli & Petrucelli, we represent families throughout Michigan’s Upper Peninsula and Wisconsin whose children suffered harm because hospitals and doctors failed to prevent or respond to this preventable crisis.
Understanding Meconium Aspiration Syndrome (MAS)
Meconium aspiration typically occurs when a distressed fetus releases meconium into the amniotic fluid and then inhales it before or during delivery. The meconium clogs the airways, preventing proper oxygen exchange, and can introduce harmful bacteria into the lungs.
Warning Signs Doctors Should Recognize
- Fetal heart-rate decelerations during labor
- “Greenish” or discolored amniotic fluid
- Low Apgar scores after birth
- Signs of labored breathing, grunting, or cyanosis (bluish skin)
If these symptoms appear, immediate airway suction, supplemental oxygen, and neonatal intensive care are required. Failure to take these steps constitutes medical negligence.
How Negligence Causes Harm
Negligence occurs when medical providers:
- Fail to identify meconium-stained amniotic fluid on rupture of membranes
- Delay calling a neonatal resuscitation team before delivery
- Use excessive suctioning or improper intubation technique
- Fail to monitor oxygen saturation and respiratory rate in the first minutes of life
- Delay transfer to a NICU or fail to administer surfactant or antibiotics
These errors can lead to hypoxia, HIE, pulmonary hypertension, and even death.
The Long-Term Consequences
Infants who survive meconium aspiration may still face lasting complications, including:
- Chronic lung disease (bronchopulmonary dysplasia)
- Cerebral palsy from oxygen deprivation
- Seizure disorders
- Neurodevelopmental delays
- Hearing or visual impairments
Our firm’s work ensures families obtain the compensation necessary to fund lifelong respiratory therapy, adaptive devices, and educational support.
How Petrucelli & Petrucelli Proves Delivery-Room Negligence
Vincent Petrucelli and his team combine medical-science precision with strategic litigation experience to expose delivery-room failures:
- Timeline Reconstruction – We align fetal-monitoring data with delivery notes to determine when meconium was first detected and when the team responded.
- Expert Collaboration – Neonatologists, pulmonologists, and obstetric specialists testify about how standard-of-care interventions would have prevented injury.
- Respiratory Data Review – We analyze blood-gas results, oxygen-saturation records, and NICU documentation to confirm inadequate ventilation or delayed resuscitation.
- Causation Proof – Pediatric neurologists link the period of oxygen deprivation to resulting brain injury using neuroimaging and developmental assessments.
Every step of our investigation is built on verifiable science—turning medical complexity into clear, persuasive evidence for juries and insurers.
Experience That Delivers Results
With 49 years of courtroom experience, Fellowship in the American College of Trial Lawyers, and recognition as a Super Lawyers® honoree since 2007, Vincent Petrucelli is one of the Midwest’s foremost authorities on catastrophic birth-injury litigation. His leadership in Ferdon v. Wisconsin Patients Compensation Fund—a landmark case that eliminated unconstitutional malpractice caps—continues to protect the rights of injured children today.
Families across Marquette, Iron Mountain, Escanaba, Menominee, Houghton, Sault Ste. Marie, and Green Bay turn to our firm for our record of multimillion-dollar recoveries and unwavering compassion. Contact Vincent Petrucelli today at (906) 265-6173 or vincent@truthfinders.com.
Petrucelli & Petrucelli — Fighting for Justice Across Michigan’s Upper Peninsula and Wisconsin
