Adkins v. Barnhart

80 F. App'x 44
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedOctober 23, 2003
Docket03-7006
StatusUnpublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 80 F. App'x 44 (Adkins v. Barnhart) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adkins v. Barnhart, 80 F. App'x 44 (10th Cir. 2003).

Opinion

ORDER AND JUDGMENT *

MURPHY, Circuit Judge.

After examining the briefs and appellate record, this panel has determined unanimously to grant the parties’ request for a decision on the briefs without oral argument. See Fed. R.App. P. 34(f); 10th Cir. R. 34.1(G). The case is therefore ordered submitted without oral argument.

Plaintiff David Adkins, Jr. appeals from the denial of social security disability and supplemental security income benefits. We exercise jurisdiction under 42 U.S.C. § 405(g) and 28 U.S.C. § 1291. We review the whole record to determine only whether the factual findings are supported by substantial evidence and the correct legal standards were applied. Goatcher v. United States Dep’t of Health & Human Servs., 52 F.3d 288, 289 (10th Cir.1995). We may not reweigh the evidence or substitute our judgment for that of the agency. See Kelley v. Chater, 62 F.3d 335, 337 (10th Cir.1995). Based on these standards, we reverse and remand the case for additional proceedings.

Facts

Claimant was born in November 1975 and is twenty-seven years old now. He went to public school through the seventh grade and then was home-schooled, but he does not have a high school diploma or its equivalent. Aplt.App. at 199-200. He is married and has one child. His past work was unskilled, heavy work as an oil field worker and at a feed store loading and unloading feed, etc., either by hand or using a forklift. Id. at 160, 200. He alleges a disability beginning on March 27, 1998, when he hurt his back at work on the oil field job lifting a fifty-five gallon trash barrel from the back of a truck. Id. at 159, 203.

Claimant has not worked since his on-the-job injury. He was in so much pain before his surgery that he used crutches to walk. Id. at 151, 153. He has made extensive efforts to find the problem and correct it. Ultimately, his treatment was managed from July 28, 1998, through March 12, 1999, by a neurosurgeon, Dr. Glenn Schoenhals. Claimant had first tried chiropractic and then steroid injections directly into the L5-S1 disk space done by an orthopedic surgeon, but neither of those approaches had helped. Dr. Schoenhals ordered a discogram and then recommended surgery.

On September 22, 1998, Dr. Schoenhals and Dr. Hahn performed on claimant a lumbar laminectomy, diskectomy, and Ray cage fusion at L5-S1 to treat “a symptomatic L5-S1 spondylolisthesis with a discogenic pain arising from the L5-S1 disk that appears to be exquisitely sensitized to any type of pressure sensitization.” Id. at 116. After surgery, a new MRI showed sear tissue around the nerve roots. Id. at *46 137. Two months after surgery, Dr. Schoenhals believed that claimant “was vastly improved over his preoperative status but ... falls well short of the definition of well ... [and still] has a long course of rehabilitation ahead of him.” Id. at 152. Dr. Schoenhals sent claimant for a course of physical therapy visits but did not expect that it would be enough. Id.

Subsequent physical therapy was not very successful to reheve claimant’s postoperative pain. Id. at 137. The physical therapist reported that Dr. Schoenhals had decided against further surgery and did not believe that claimant would improve, but wanted to keep him from getting worse. Id. Dr. Schoenhals acknowledged that claimant was not free from pain, even after he started physical therapy. Id. at 151. Dr. Schoenhals recognized that claimant’s complaints of pain, both before and after the surgery, were outside the norm, but did not question that claimant’s continued pain was real. He was “still concerned that we should look further because most individuals do far better than David after this [surgery].” Id. at 150. He found an anatomic abnormality, probably due to scar tissue, elevating the nerve root on the right side of L5-S1. Id. at 149.

Dr. Schoenhals ordered a selected nerve root block, id. at 148, which was performed at Mercy Hospital by Dr. Marshall, id. at 132, but it provided claimant only partial and temporary pain relief, id. at 147. Dr. Schoenhals then ordered an EMG/nerve conduction study, which revealed no “correctable anatomical abnormality responsible for [claimant’s] pain.” Id. at 146 (emphasis added). Dr. Schoenhals decided on March 12, 1999, that claimant was at maximum medical benefit with a twenty-five to thirty percent impairment to the body as a whole, released him with instructions to continue using a prescribed bone stimulator and spinal exercises, and said: “Hopefully, in the future he will improve.” Id. He did not recommend further surgery.

Claimant told his attorney that Dr. Schoenhals told him less than a year after the surgery that the fusion did not take, but that Dr. Schoenhals would not return his calls seeking to get this information in writing for the administrative record. Id. at 114. This was not a new allegation-in May 1999, claimant told a vocational specialist contacted for his worker’s compensation claim that he had been told that the fusion did not take. Id. at 109. In addition, the EMG/nerve conduction study done by Dr. Udonta, another neurologist, revealed changes in claimant consistent with low feet temperature and chronic L5-S1 radiculopathies. Id. at 144. Also, Dr. Schoenhals’ notes reflect that the purpose of the bone stimulator was to promote fusion, and that claimant was advised to continue using the bone stimulator when Dr. Schoenhals released him from care in March 1999. Id. at 146, 153. These reports suggest that the fusion did not take. On the other hand, Dr. Schoenhals reported that his review of claimant’s post-operative X-rays indicated no movement at the intended fused level, id. at 150, which indicates that it did take.

At the hearing, claimant testified that he still suffers pain in his lower back, his tailbone, and down both legs. Id. at 205. He testified that he has used a bone stimulator and TENS unit, both of which were prescribed by doctors. Id. at 209. He also uses a cane for balance while walking, although it was not prescribed by a doctor. Id. at 207. He said that he can stand for fifteen to twenty minutes before needing to sit or lie down. Id. at 208. He can sit for thirty to forty-five minutes. Id. He sometimes goes to the store with his wife, but he uses a wheelchair once they get to the store. Id. at 209.

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Bluebook (online)
80 F. App'x 44, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adkins-v-barnhart-ca10-2003.