Deana v. Landwehr, a/k/a Deana Streubing v. State of Wyoming, ex rel., Wyoming Workers' Safety and Compensation Division

2014 WY 25, 318 P.3d 813, 2014 WL 688232, 2014 Wyo. LEXIS 26
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 21, 2014
DocketS-13-0139
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 2014 WY 25 (Deana v. Landwehr, a/k/a Deana Streubing v. State of Wyoming, ex rel., Wyoming Workers' Safety and Compensation Division) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Deana v. Landwehr, a/k/a Deana Streubing v. State of Wyoming, ex rel., Wyoming Workers' Safety and Compensation Division, 2014 WY 25, 318 P.3d 813, 2014 WL 688232, 2014 Wyo. LEXIS 26 (Wyo. 2014).

Opinion

BURKE, Justice.

[¶1] The Wyoming Workers' Safety and Compensation Division awarded benefits to Appellant, Deana Landwehr, after she experienced a workplace injury to her back in 1999. In 2008, Ms. Landwehr experienced a second workplace injury while employed in Nebraska. In 2010, Ms. Landwehr sought payment for prescription medication that she claimed was necessary treatment relating to her 1999 workplace injury. The Division denied the claim. Ms. Landwehr requested a contested case hearing, and the hearing examiner upheld the Division's denial of benefits, Ms. Landwehr appealed to the district court, which affirmed the hearing examiner's order. She challenges the district court's decision in this appeal. We affirm.

ISSUE

[¶2] Ms. Landwehr presents the following issue:

Was the hearing examiner's determination that Appellant failed to satisfy her burden of proof unsupported by substantial evidence in the record as a whole?

*816 FACTS

[¶3] In August, 1999, Ms. Landwehr sustained a work-related injury while working as a nursing assistant for Cheyenne Health Care Center. Ms. Landwehr hurt her back when she attempted to lift a patient from her wheelchair. Six days later, she sought medical treatment at a primary care clinic, where she reported mid-back pain and "an associated extremity numbness and tingling ... intermittent with this pain." Dr. John J. Viola saw Ms. Landwehr approximately three weeks later for a neurosurgical consultation. After performing a physical examination, Dr. Viola concluded that Ms. Landwehr "has predominantly elements of a thoracic strain" and that physical therapy would likely be the most appropriate treatment.

[¶4] In September, 1999, Dr. Viola ordered an MRI of Ms. Landwehr's back, which revealed the following findings:

The alignment of the thoracie spine is normal. There is normal bone marrow signal in each vertebral body with no evidence of hemorrhage or bone marrow replacement. There is mild dise space narrowing in the mid thoracic spine at T6-7, T7-8, and T8-9 but no evidence of dise herniation or thecal sac impingement. No impingement of the thoracic spinal cord. The cord is normal in size and signal at all points and no posteri- or abnormalities or paravertebral abnormalities.

In the "Impression" section of the report, it was noted that there were "No focal findings to explain mid back pain." At a follow-up visit on September 10, Dr. Viola noted that Ms. Landwehr's symptoms had "neither improved nor worsened."

[¶5] Ms. Landwehr began participating in a physical therapy program, and, after an evaluation on October 1, Dr. Viola noted that she was "making progress in physical therapy." In a progress note dated November 8, Ms. Landwehr's physical therapist noted that her "primary complaints continue to be focused in the thoracic spine." However, after Dr. Viola evaluated Ms. Landwehr in December, he noted for the first time that she was having neck pain and headaches in addition to numbness in her right hand. Dr. Viola referred Ms. Landwehr to Dr. Harlan R. Ribnik, a pain management physician, who ordered another MRI of Ms. Landwehr's back. That MRI also revealed that "Disc height and dise signal intensity is normal at every level." The "Impression" section of the MRI report stated that there was "No [magnetic resonance] evidence of focal cervical dise herniation to explain the neck pain" and "no evidence of a C5-C6 dise herniation." Dr. Ribnik gave Ms. Landwehr a cervical epidural steroid injection on January 6, 2000, but she received "minimal, if any relief from her pain." As a result of her injury, Ms. Landwehr received temporary total disability benefits from the Division. After those benefits expired, she went back to work as a unit secretary.

[¶6] In June, 2000, Dr. Viola referred Ms. Landwehr to Dr. Reed Shafer, who conducted an electrodiagnostic study of Ms. Landwehr's upper extremities, The nerve study revealed that Ms. Landwehr "does not have evidence of primary muscle disease or nerve root problems" but that she "certainly does have evidence of median neuropathy at the level of the wrist, compatible with her clinical carpal tunnel syndrome." At a follow-up visit, Dr. Viola diagnosed Ms. Land-wehr with "carpal tunnel syndrome right greater than left." Dr. Viola stated that "it is reasonable for [Ms. Landwehr] to consider surgical release of her carpal tunnel syndrome" and noted that Ms. Landwehr indicated her willingness to proceed with the necessary surgery. There is no indication in the record, however, that Ms. Landwehr ever opted to undergo surgery to treat her carpal tunnel syndrome. Dr. Viola prescribed Cele-brex to relieve Ms. Landwehr's earpal tunnel symptoms. In September, 2000, Ms. Land-wehr received a 12% whole body impairment rating as a result of her workplace injury, and the Division awarded permanent partial impairment benefits to Ms. Landwehr.

[¶7] Over the next several years, Ms. Landwehr continued to report "neck, shoulder, [and] right upper extremity pain," as well as headaches, to multiple treating physicians. In 2008, her primary care physician, Dr. Jeanette Larson, diagnosed her with fi-bromyalgia, which she treated with various prescription medications, including Flexeril, *817 Neurontin, and Tramadol. In 2004, Ms. Landwehr moved to Ogallala, Nebraska, but she continued to see Dr. Ribnik on a semiannual basis until April, 2005 when, according to Ms. Landwehr, he refused to see her or refer her to another doctor.

[¶8] In September, 2006, Ms. Landwehr saw Dr. Kurt Hopfensperger in Cheyenne for a neurologic consultation. In his report of the evaluation, Dr. Hopfensperger noted that a review of Ms. Landwehr's systems revealed, among other ailments, "fatigue, chronic sinus drainage, frequent headaches, lightheadedness, numbness and tingling, joint pain, joint stiffness, muscle weakness, muscle pain, back pain, cold extremities, difficulty walking, peptic ulcer, nervousness, insomnia, [and] depression[.]" Although Dr. Hopfensperger was unable to diagnose any specific disease or disorder based on Ms. Landwehr's symptoms, he prescribed duloxe-tine (Cymbalta) to treat Ms. Landwehr's headaches and the symptoms in her extremities. Dr. Hopfensperger ordered an MRI of Ms. Landwehr's thoracie spine, which revealed that "Thoracic marrow signal intensity is normal. There is no significant canal stenosis. No significant dise herniations are identified." After a follow-up visit in April, 2007, Dr. Hopfensperger noted that Ms. Landwehr had stated that the duloxetine was "working good," but that she "continues however to have neck and back pain, as well as tingling in her upper extremities distally." He noted that "Regarding her neck and back pain, I do not [have] anything to offer this patient." After determining that Ms. Land-wehr's MRI was "negative," Dr. Hopfensper-ger ordered a nerve conduction study. That study revealed, similar to the previous nerve conduction study ordered by Dr. Viola, that Ms. Landwehr had "[aldvanced right carpal tunnel syndrome" and "[mJoderate left carpal tunnel syndrome."

[¶ 9] - In January, 2008, Ms. Landwehr experienced a second work-related injury while employed in the bakery at a grocery store in Nebraska. According to Ms. Landwehr, she was injured when a ten-pound muffin pan fell from a drying rack and struck her on the head, shoulder, and shin.

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2014 WY 25, 318 P.3d 813, 2014 WL 688232, 2014 Wyo. LEXIS 26, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/deana-v-landwehr-aka-deana-streubing-v-state-of-wyoming-ex-rel-wyo-2014.