Christina Saccomano v. Andrew Saul

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. California
DecidedSeptember 30, 2019
Docket3:18-cv-02624
StatusUnknown

This text of Christina Saccomano v. Andrew Saul (Christina Saccomano v. Andrew Saul) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Christina Saccomano v. Andrew Saul, (N.D. Cal. 2019).

Opinion

1 2 3 4 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT 5 NORTHERN DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA 6 CHRISTINA SACCOMANO, 7 Case No. 18-cv-02624-JCS Plaintiff, 8 v. ORDER RE MOTIONS FOR 9 SUMMARY JUDGMENT ANDREW SAUL, 10 Re: Dkt. Nos. 20, 24 Defendant. 11

12 13 I. INTRODUCTION 14 Plaintiff Christina Saccomano brings this action appealing the final decision of Defendant 15 Andrew Saul, Commissioner of Social Security (the “Commissioner”),1 to deny Saccomano’s 16 application for disability benefits. The parties have filed cross motions for summary judgment 17 pursuant to Civil Local Rule 16-5. For the reasons discussed below, Saccomano’s motion is 18 GRANTED, the Commissioner’s motion is DENIED, and the matter is REMANDED to the 19 Commissioner for an award of benefits.2 20 II. BACKGROUND 21 The parties’ motions and ALJ’s decision are primarily concerned with Saccomano’s neck 22 and shoulder injury and limitation of her right hand. The Court’s summary of the record focuses 23 on those two issues as addressed by the parties and is therefore not intended to be a complete 24 recitation of Saccomano’s medical history. 25 26 1 Andrew Saul was confirmed as Commissioner while this action was pending, and is therefore 27 substituted as the defendant as a matter of law. See 42 U.S.C. § 405(g); Fed. R. Civ. P. 25(d). 1 A. Saccomano’s Medical Records 2 Christina Saccomano is a 57-year-old woman with a twelfth-grade education. 3 Administrative Record (“AR,” dkt. 15) at 82, 91. She worked as a produce clerk her entire adult 4 life starting in 1984. Id. at 91. In 2005, Saccomano was involved in an all-terrain vehicle 5 (“ATV”) accident that resulted in an injury to her shoulder. Id. at 44. She had shoulder surgery 6 three years later in 2008. Id. Before the surgery Saccomano reported that she “had an 7 impingement” which meant she “could not raise [her] right arm over 90 degrees.” Id. at 44–45. 8 Saccomano underwent an MRI on April 29, 2009 after the surgery, which showed “multilevel 9 degenerative changes with disk space narrowing and some facet arthritis.” Id. at 294. After the 10 surgery, her arm improved and Saccomano returned to work, but by October 2013 her arm pain 11 had returned, accompanied by shoulder pain. Id. at 45–46. Saccomano stopped working as a 12 produce clerk for Safeway because of the pain. Id. at 45. She alleges an onset date of October 8, 13 2013 for her disability. Id. at 164. She “ha[s] not worked in any capacity since” that date. Id. 14 Before she stopped working, Saccomano sought treatment to manage her pain. Dr. 15 Richard Kidd treated her pain with physical therapy but noted minimal progress. Id. at 270–83. 16 On May 28, 2013, Dr. James Carter reported that an x-ray of the limited cervical area of 17 Saccomano’s spine indicated that she suffered from degenerative spondylolisthesis at discs C3 and 18 C4, flattening of the mid to lower cervical curve of the spine, degenerative disk disease at C4/C5, 19 C5/C6, and C6/C7, and facet arthrosis at C2/C3, C3/C4, and C4/C5. Id. at 269. Dr. Carter also 20 noted “[a]nterior weight bearing . . . which has been associated with increased biomedical stress at 21 the cervicalthoracic junction.” Id. He noted that Saccomano’s “[a]nterior soft tissue markings 22 appear within normal limits.” Id. Saccomano continued receiving heat, massage, and physical 23 therapy, but Dr. Kidd described her progress as “stalled,” “minimal,” or “minimal to fair.” Id. at 24 272–79. 25 On August 5, 2013, Saccomano underwent an electromyography (“EMG”) test with Dr. 26 Maliheh Massih. AR 318–20. The test “reveal[ed] evidence of moderate acute C6 radiculopathy 27 on the right, [but] there was no evidence of focal or diffuse neuropathy.” Id. at 320. Dr. Massih 1 which, when relatively irritated, may underlie pain and paresthesias arising from within ‘named’ 2 peripheral nerves, soft tissues, bony structures, and sensory roots.” Id. 3 Dr. Wendy Flapan evaluated Saccomano at the Stanford Hospital Spine Clinic on June 5, 4 2013, and reported her findings to Dr. Cathy Joseph, also at Stanford Hospital. Id. at 284–86. Dr. 5 Flapan suggested that Saccomano “may have some ongoing spondylosis that are causing her 6 pain.” Id. at 285. While Dr. Flapan did “not believe that it was necessary at this time to 7 investigate the right shoulder,” she felt that Saccomano “may have some symptomology 8 emanating from within the shoulder.” Id. Dr. Flapan further noted that Saccomano’s Spurling’s 9 test3 was negative, that her shoulder range of motion was full, and that provocative maneuvers of 10 the right shoulder were negative. Id. 11 Saccomano received cervical epidural steroid injections on September 11, 2013 and 12 October 22, 2013. Id. at 334, 341. Dr. Gang Li, Saccomano’s treating physician, resorted to 13 injections because Saccomano “ha[d] tried conservative medical and physical therapies without 14 significant improvement of the pain.” Id. at 341. Saccomano reported that injections helped but 15 that the pain returned. Id. at 351. Dr. Li’s treatment notes consistently indicated a positive 16 Spurling’s test, a “guarded range of motion in flexion, extension, lateral rotation and lateral 17 bending with an increase in pain with bilat lateral rotation over the (R) para-spinal muscles,” and 18 the ineffectiveness of other treatment measures, including epidural injections. Id. at 334–40. His 19 colleague at the Comprehensive Pain Management Center, Clark J. Bishop, PA, reported similar 20 findings, including a positive Spurling’s test and decreased sensation at the C6/7 dermatomes. Id. 21 at 332. Dr. Li reported that while Saccomano was not taking Naproxen consistently, “[t]he patient 22 continues on stable dose of medications in a responsible and compliant fashion.” Id. at 351–52. 23 On January 28, 2014, Dr. Edward Rustamzadeh noted that Saccomano complained of pain 24 in her right arm accompanied by “intermittent numbness and tingling.” Id. at 297. He viewed 25 3 “Physicians conduct a Spurling’s test to assess nerve root compression and cervical 26 radiculopathy by turning the patient’s head and applying downward pressure. A positive Spurling’s sign indicates that the neck pain radiates to the area of the body connected to the 27 affected nerve.” Shaw v. AT & T Umbrella Ben. Plan No. 1, 795 F.3d 538 n.1 (6th Cir. 2015) 1 Saccomano’s 2009 post-surgery MRI and concluded that it “showed some mild degenerative disk 2 disease” but “no significant foraminal stenosis on the right to explain any of her radicular 3 symptoms.” Id. at 298. Doctors were divided as to the cause of her symptoms. Dr. Rustamzadeh 4 wrote: “I cannot explain [the EMG results] on the imaging, nor can I explain it in clinical 5 findings.” Id. He opined that the cause of her pain was “most likely . . . shoulder arthropathy.” 6 Id. 7 On February 6, 2014, Dr. Zackary Vaughn examined the 2013 x-rays and concluded that 8 they “do not demonstrate any significant abnormal findings [but] they do demonstrate the previous 9 distal clavicle excision with a small area of calcification in the area of the remaining AC joint.” 10 Id. at 305. He opined that the source of Saccomano’s pain was not her shoulder but her spine, and 11 that her pain “may represent a variant of thoracic outlet syndrome.” Id. Dr. Matthew Smuck 12 reviewed the same images on March 12 and concluded that “[f]our views of the right shoulder 13 demonstrate no acute fracture or dislocation. Mild degenerative change of the acromioclavicular 14 joint, with resportion of the distal clavicle . . . . concerning for osteolysis.” Id. at 311.

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Bluebook (online)
Christina Saccomano v. Andrew Saul, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/christina-saccomano-v-andrew-saul-cand-2019.