When Doctors Ignore the Signs of Disaster — We Hold Them Accountable
A uterine rupture is one of the most devastating emergencies that can occur during childbirth.
It happens when the wall of the uterus tears, often along the scar from a prior cesarean section.
When that tear goes undetected or untreated, both mother and baby face catastrophic consequences — severe bleeding, oxygen deprivation, and, in the worst cases, death.
At Petrucelli & Petrucelli, we represent mothers and families across Michigan’s Upper Peninsula and Wisconsin who have suffered due to the failure of hospitals and physicians to prevent, recognize, or respond to uterine rupture and other surgical errors during labor.
Understanding Uterine Rupture and VBAC Risks
What Is a Uterine Rupture?
A uterine rupture occurs when the uterus tears open, allowing the baby, placenta, or amniotic fluid to leak into the mother’s abdomen. This often leads to massive hemorrhage and immediate fetal distress. Uterine rupture requires emergency surgery within minutes to save the mother’s life and prevent brain damage or death for the baby.
VBAC (Vaginal Birth After Cesarean)
While many women can safely attempt a vaginal delivery after a prior C-section, VBACs carry an increased risk of uterine rupture due to weakened scar tissue. Hospitals offering VBAC must have an on-site surgical and anesthesia team available 24/7 — yet, far too often, that safety standard is ignored in smaller facilities across the Upper Peninsula and Northern Wisconsin.
Common Forms of Negligence
Our firm has uncovered recurring failures in these cases, including:
- Allowing VBAC labor in hospitals without emergency surgical capability
- Failing to monitor uterine contractions and fetal heart rate continuously
- Overusing Pitocin or Cytotec, increasing pressure on the uterine wall
- Ignoring symptoms such as sudden abdominal pain, bleeding, or maternal distress
- Delaying conversion to C-section or calling for surgical backup
- Negligent surgical repair or failure to control hemorrhage after rupture
Each of these errors represents a clear departure from the accepted standard of obstetric care.
The Consequences of Delay
When uterine rupture occurs, every minute matters. In as little as five minutes, the baby can lose oxygen completely, resulting in:
- Hypoxic-Ischemic Encephalopathy (HIE)
- Cerebral Palsy or severe developmental disability
- Stillbirth or neonatal death
- Maternal hemorrhagic shock or hysterectomy
These cases require intensive expert analysis and decisive legal action to ensure accountability for such preventable harm.
How Petrucelli & Petrucelli Proves Surgical Negligence
Vincent Petrucelli and his trial team meticulously reconstruct each moment of care before, during, and after rupture:
- Electronic Record Analysis – Reviewing fetal-monitoring strips, contraction logs, and medication charts for signs of uterine stress.
- Timeline Correlation – Aligning the exact minute rupture occurred with provider response times documented in the chart.
- Expert Review – Collaborating with obstetric surgeons, anesthesiologists, and maternal-fetal-medicine experts to determine how prompt surgery would have changed the outcome.
- Surgical Technique Evaluation – Examining incision type, repair method, and intraoperative communication to identify preventable errors.
Our firm’s ability to translate complex operative records into compelling, medically verified narratives has led to some of the region’s largest obstetric-settlement recoveries.
A Legacy of Success and Advocacy
For nearly 50 years, Vincent Petrucelli — Fellow of the American College of Trial Lawyers, Super Lawyers® honoree since 2007, and lead counsel in Ferdon v. Wisconsin Patients Compensation Fund — has successfully litigated high-risk obstetric cases throughout Marquette, Iron Mountain, Escanaba, Menominee, Houghton, and Green Bay. His landmark work has set precedents for how hospitals must manage VBAC and emergency-delivery protocols, saving lives far beyond the courtroom.
Your Family’s Safety Should Never Depend on Luck
Uterine rupture and surgical negligence are medical emergencies that demand immediate, competent intervention. When hospitals fail to meet that standard, our firm ensures they face accountability. We fight not only for compensation but also for systemic change, so no other mother endures the same preventable trauma. Contact Vincent Petrucelli today at (906) 265-6173 or vincent@truthfinders.com.
Petrucelli & Petrucelli — Fighting for Justice Across Michigan’s Upper Peninsula and Wisconsin
