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Stroke and Heart Attack Misdiagnosis in Louisiana ERs: Missed Red Flags That Lead to Catastrophic Harm

Disclaimer: This article is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Reading this content does not create an attorney-client relationship with Ikerd Law Firm. If you believe a medical provider failed to diagnose a stroke or heart attack, consult a licensed Louisiana medical malpractice attorney about the specific facts of your situation.

Prior results do not guarantee a similar outcome.


Key Takeaways

  • Stroke and heart attack misdiagnoses in ERs often happen to younger patients and to women, whose symptoms do not always match the classic profile.
  • Louisiana law requires most malpractice claims to go through a medical review panel under La. R.S. § 40:1231.8 before a lawsuit can be filed.
  • The prescriptive period for medical malpractice in Louisiana is one year from the act or from discovery, with an absolute three-year outer limit under La. R.S. § 9:5628.
  • The Louisiana Medical Malpractice Act caps qualified provider liability, but the Patient’s Compensation Fund covers excess damages and past and future medical care costs above the cap.
  • Even when a patient’s odds were already poor, the lost chance doctrine recognized in Smith v. State treats the loss of a meaningful chance of a better outcome as a compensable injury.

How ER Stroke and Heart Attack Misdiagnoses Happen

Female doctor working with patient in clinic. Cardiology consultationMost families do not arrive at our office asking about statutes. They arrive because something went wrong.

A parent went to the ER with dizziness and slurred speech, was told it was a migraine or anxiety, and was sent home. Hours or days later, the stroke that was already underway left lasting damage.

The family is not trying to assign blame for no reason. They are trying to understand why the warning signs were not caught.

Emergency rooms are high-pressure environments. Physicians see a high volume of patients, shifts change in the middle of care, and decisions are made quickly with incomplete information.

Those conditions do not excuse a missed diagnosis, but they help explain where the errors tend to occur.

Stroke and heart attack are missed more often than people expect. A 2016 retrospective analysis published in Stroke found that emergency physicians fail to identify ischemic stroke in roughly 22 percent of initial emergency department visits. In community hospitals, where most Louisiana patients seek emergency care, the misdiagnosis rate reached 26 percent.

Part of the problem is that the classic signs are not always present. And, when classic symptoms are present, those classic signs can be overlooked or a physician can inappropriately determine the patient’s “last known well time,” which is critical for administration of tPA (tissue plasminogen activator).

A stroke can show up as confusion alone. A heart attack can show up as nausea or fatigue rather than crushing chest pain.

When the presentation does not match the textbook, the condition gets relabeled. A stroke becomes vertigo, anxiety, or dehydration. A heart attack becomes acid reflux, a panic attack, or a pulled muscle.

The diagnostic workup is where the standard of care often breaks down. Failing to recognize focal neurological symptoms and appropriately assess a patient’s last known well time, or skipping an electrocardiogram (or misinterpreting it) and troponin blood test for a patient with cardiac symptoms, can mean the difference between treatment and catastrophe.

The Ikerd Law Firm’s Lafayette medical malpractice attorney understands how these decisions are made inside the hospital. Call (337) 366-8994 for a free consultation.


Warning Signs That Are Commonly Overlooked in Louisiana ERs

Public stroke campaigns teach the FAST acronym: face drooping, arm weakness, speech difficulty, and time to call for help. That message saves lives. The trouble is that a real stroke does not always cooperate with the acronym.

The table below shows what providers are trained to recognize and what they frequently miss:

Condition Classic Signs Frequently Missed Presentations
Stroke Facial drooping

Arm weakness

Slurred speech

Sudden confusion with no facial droop

Isolated speech difficulty

Severe sudden headache

Dizziness with no other neurological signs

Heart attack Chest pain or pressure

Pain radiating to left arm

Nausea

Jaw or back pain

Extreme fatigue

Shortness of breath — especially in women and younger patients

Stroke warning signs that are most often overlooked in Louisiana ERs include:

  • Sudden confusion with no accompanying facial droop
  • One-side paresthesia
  • Isolated trouble speaking or understanding speech
  • Dizziness or loss of balance without other obvious neurological signs
  • A severe sudden headache, often described by patients as the worst of their life

Heart attack presentations that are frequently dismissed, particularly in women, include the following:

  • Nausea without chest pain
  • Jaw or back pain
  • Extreme or unexplained fatigue
  • Shortness of breath with no other cardiac signs

Age plays a role as well. Younger patients are less likely to be worked up for a cardiovascular event, even when they arrive with symptoms that would prompt an immediate workup in an older patient.

That assumption — that a young person is not having a stroke or heart attack — is exactly where serious errors take root.

Misdiagnosis usually starts at triage. A patient with atypical symptoms: a younger woman, someone with an anxiety history, a presentation that does not match the textbook, gets labeled low-risk before a full workup begins. That first impression sticks.

Clinicians call it diagnostic anchoring: once a physician settles on an early explanation such as vertigo or migraine, later findings get filtered through that label rather than reconsidered from scratch. Brain imaging that would have settled the question never gets ordered.

The standard workup each condition requires is straightforward:

  • Suspected stroke: timely neurological examination, accurate calculation of a patient’s “last known well time,” and if a stroke is suspected, a head CT to rule out a hemorrhagic stroke.
  • Possible heart attack: electrocardiogram and serial cardiac marker bloodwork

Senior patient suffering from heart attack . Doctor care about patient with heart painIn stroke cases, the failure to recognize focal neurological deficits and gather an appropriate history to determine patient baseline (i.e., the patient’s clinical signs and symptoms are new) can lead to grave injury.

Additionally, there are two types of strokes: Ischemia and Hemorrhagic. Ischemic is the classic stroke patients think of when someone presents with one-sided weakness. That occurs because a clot has formed and is cutting off the brain’s blood supply.

Hemorrhagic strokes occur when a blood vessel in the brain bursts, causing bleeding and increased intracranial pressure.

Ischemic strokes can be treated by the “clot busting” drug, tPA. However, prior to administration of tPA for a suspected stroke, the ER physician or neurologist must appropriately ensure the patient is in fact a candidate for tPA.

  1. The physician must obtain a head CT to ensure the patient’s symptoms are not the result of a hemorrhagic stroke or bleed. Administering tPA to a patient with a hemorrhagic stroke would be fatal as the clot-busting drug would only cause the patient to bleed more in their brain. A “negative” CT scan in the presence of focal neurological symptoms is presumed to be an Ischemic stroke.
  2. If the patient is suffering from a presumed ischemic stroke and a bleed has been ruled out, then the ER physician or neurologist must assess the patient to determine when their “last known well time” was. This is critical because there is a 4-hour window within which tPA can be administered. If the patient is outside the 4-hour window—meaning their last known well time (or time they last did not have stroke like symptoms) is greater than 4 hours, they are not a candidate for tPA.
  • It is critical that the physician speak with all persons available to determine last known well time. Sometimes the patient does not know or cannot provide a history. When the details are gray, seeking all sources of patient history is critical.
  • In medical malpractice cases, a physician can be found to have breached the standard of care, if they failed to appropriately assess last known well time, based upon the information available to them at the time.

Stroke medicine runs on the principle of “time is brain”. Every hour of untreated ischemia causes measurable neurological loss.

Regarding heart attacks, when a patient presents with atypical symptoms, an ER physician must still perform the necessary screenings to rule out a cardiac event. Sometimes nursing staff fail to appropriately communicate signs and symptoms concerning a heart attack to the physicians. And sometimes the ER physician misses signs of a STEMI (ST elevation myocardial infarction) on an

ECG (electrocardiogram), which should have resulted in immediate transfer to the cath lab or transfer to a facility with a cath lab.


The Standard of Care and What “Missed” Actually Means Legally

Growing older comes with some tough realities.Not every bad outcome is malpractice. Medicine carries real uncertainty, and a poor result alone does not prove that anyone did anything wrong. The law draws the line at the standard of care.

The standard of care is the degree of care, skill, and treatment that a reasonably competent physician in the same specialty would have provided under similar circumstances. It is measured against what the medical community does, not against a perfect outcome. A physician who acts within that standard is not liable, even if the patient is harmed.

To prove medical malpractice in Louisiana, an injured patient must satisfy a two-part test under La. R.S. § 9:2794(A):

  1. Deviation from the standard of care — the provider’s conduct fell below what a reasonably competent physician in the same specialty would have done.
  2. Causation — that deviation caused the patient’s injury.

Expert testimony is generally required to establish both elements, which is one reason proving medical negligence in Lafayette depends heavily on the right expert witnesses from the start.

Causation is often the hardest element in a misdiagnosis case. The question is not only whether the ER missed the stroke but also whether catching it would have changed the outcome. That is where the lost chance doctrine becomes important.

Under Smith v. State, Dep’t of Health & Hosps., 676 So. 2d 543 (La. 1996), the Louisiana Supreme Court established that the loss of a meaningful probability of a better outcome is itself a compensable injury, even when the patient’s chances were already less than fifty-fifty before the negligence occurred.

A defendant cannot escape responsibility simply by arguing the patient might have suffered harm anyway. If the missed diagnosis took away a real chance at recovery or survival, that lost chance is something the law recognizes.


The Louisiana Medical Malpractice Act: What Limits Your Recovery and What Does Not

Medical malpractice claims in Louisiana operate under a separate set of rules from ordinary injury cases. Those rules come from the Louisiana Medical Malpractice Act, and they affect both how much you can recover and how the case must begin.

The damages structure under La. R.S. § 40:1231.2 works in three tiers:

LMMA Component Dollar Limit Who Pays
Each individual qualified provider’s liability $100,000 Provider and provider’s malpractice insurer.
Total recovery cap (all defendants combined) $500,000 The Patient’s Compensation Fund covers amounts above each provider’s $100,000 share, up to the general cap.
Past and future medical care and related benefits

✓ No cap The Patient’s Compensation Fund, paid above and beyond the $500,000 general cap.

The future medical care carve-out matters enormously in a stroke case, where long-term rehabilitation and ongoing care can far exceed the general damages cap.

One important caveat: the cap applies to providers who are enrolled as qualified health care providers under the Act. Some hospitals or physicians choose not to participate in the Louisiana Medical Malpractice Act. Those physicians and hospitals who do not participate do not receive the benefit of the damages cap or the medical review panel.

The process matters as much as the numbers. When a provider participates in the patient’s compensation fund system, and thus receives the benefits of the Louisiana Medical Malpractice Act, before filing a lawsuit, the claim must first go through a medical review panel under La. R.S. § 40:1231.8. The panel consists of three health care providers in the relevant specialty who review the evidence.

The panel process typically takes a year or more, but it suspends the prescriptive period while it is pending. Promptly filing the panel complaint is the critical first step, because before a medical malpractice lawsuit can be filed in Louisiana, most cases must go through a Louisiana medical review panel, whose opinion shall be admissible in court but not binding on the eventual jury.

The medical review panel process and the LMMA’s procedural requirements make medical malpractice claims in Louisiana more complex and expensive than other personal injury cases.


How Much Time You Have to File After an ER Misdiagnosis

Under La. R.S. § 9:5628, the medical review panel filing deadlines work as follows:

Deadline Type Rule Period
Standard prescriptive period La. R.S. § 9:5628 1 year

From the date of the act, OR 1 year from the date of discovery.
Absolute outer limit La. R.S. § 9:5628 3 years

From the act or omission. This limit cannot be extended, regardless of when discovery occurred. However, some narrow exceptions apply, including the continuing treatment rule.

For a misdiagnosis, the one-year clock may start when the patient or family discovers, or reasonably should have discovered, that an error occurred. The three-year limit runs from the date of the act itself, no matter when the harm came to light.

Waiting is dangerous for reasons beyond the deadline. Memories fade, witnesses move on, and medical records can be supplemented or revised over time.


What a Louisiana Medical Malpractice Claim Requires

Rights for medical malpracticeA strong ER misdiagnosis case is built on records and expert review, not on instinct. Building one requires several specific steps:

  1. Request the complete ER chart immediately: You need the triage notes, nursing notes, physician documentation, full order history, imaging reports, and discharge instructions exactly as written. These records show what providers knew, what they did, and what they failed to do. (Your attorney should immediately order these upon to hiring them)
  2. Examine the order history for what was not ordered in a patient who presented with a sudden severe headache or new unilateral weakness; the absence of an imaging order is itself evidence that the required workup never happened.
  3. Preserve the discharge instructions. A patient sent home with a written diagnosis of “migraine” or “anxiety” who later had a confirmed stroke holds a document that becomes a central piece of the record.
  4. Retain an independent medical expert. Louisiana generally requires expert testimony to establish both the standard of care and the causation link. An ER medicine physician, neurologist, or cardiologist who understands the relevant specialty reviews the chart and explains whether the workup, diagnosis, or treatment fell short, which is why selecting the right expert witness for a medical malpractice case in Louisiana is one of the most important early decisions in building a claim.
  5. File the medical review panel complaint before the prescriptive period expires. The panel process, not a lawsuit, is the required first step. The complaint filing suspends the prescriptive period while the panel proceeds.

If you want to understand stroke risk and prevention more broadly, the CDC stroke data provides reliable, government-sourced information on warning signs and outcomes.


When the ER Got It Wrong, Your Family Deserves Answers

If an emergency room sent you or someone you love home with a stroke or heart attack that should have been caught, you have every right to ask why. Call the Ikerd Law Firm at (337) 366-8994.


Frequently Asked Questions

Can you sue a Louisiana hospital for missing a stroke diagnosis?

Yes, if the ER physician’s failure to recognize and treat the stroke departed from the accepted standard of care and caused the patient’s harm, a medical malpractice claim may be available. Louisiana law requires the claim to go through a medical review panel before a lawsuit can be filed in most cases. An attorney can help you determine whether the facts support a claim.

What are the signs of a stroke that ER doctors sometimes miss?

Strokes do not always present with the classic facial droop or arm weakness. Sudden confusion, isolated speech difficulty, dizziness without other neurological signs, or a severe sudden headache can each indicate a stroke. Atypical presentations are especially common in women and younger patients and are more likely to be dismissed or attributed to other causes.

How long do you have to file a medical malpractice claim in Louisiana after an ER misdiagnosis?

Under La. R.S. § 9:5628, a patient has one year from the date of the alleged malpractice or one year from the date of discovery to file a claim and no more than three years from the act or omission. Filing a panel complaint, not a lawsuit, is the first required step before any case goes to court.

What is the standard of care for stroke diagnosis in an emergency room?

The standard of care generally requires an ER physician to consider and rule out stroke when a patient presents with neurological symptoms. This typically involves a prompt neurological examination, assessment of stroke risk factors, assessment of last known well time, and CT imaging of the head. The exact requirements depend on the patient’s presentation and the facility.

What damages can you recover in a Louisiana ER misdiagnosis case?

Recoverable damages may include past and future medical expenses, lost wages and earning capacity, pain and suffering, and loss of enjoyment of life. A wrongful death claim may also be available for surviving family members. Under the Louisiana Medical Malpractice Act, provider liability is capped, with the Patient’s Compensation Fund covering excess amounts and past and future medical care and related needs above the cap.


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