J.T. Tedesco v. Kane Freight Lines, Inc. (WCAB)

CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 19, 2023
Docket1270 C.D. 2021
StatusUnpublished

This text of J.T. Tedesco v. Kane Freight Lines, Inc. (WCAB) (J.T. Tedesco v. Kane Freight Lines, Inc. (WCAB)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
J.T. Tedesco v. Kane Freight Lines, Inc. (WCAB), (Pa. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA

Jay T. Tedesco, : Petitioner : : v. : : Kane Freight Lines, Inc. (Workers’ : Compensation Appeal Board), : No. 1270 C.D. 2021 Respondent : Submitted: January 27, 2023

BEFORE: HONORABLE CHRISTINE FIZZANO CANNON, Judge HONORABLE ELLEN CEISLER, Judge HONORABLE LORI A. DUMAS, Judge

OPINION NOT REPORTED

MEMORANDUM OPINION BY JUDGE FIZZANO CANNON FILED: May 19, 2023

Jay T. Tedesco (Claimant) petitions for review of the October 21, 2021, decision and order of the Workers’ Compensation Appeal Board (Board), which affirmed with modification a November 4, 2020, decision and order of the Workers’ Compensation Judge (WCJ). The WCJ granted a modification petition filed by Kane Freight Lines, Inc. (Employer), based on a July 11, 2019, Impairment Rating Evaluation (IRE). Upon review, we affirm.

I. Factual & Procedural Background On March 31, 2015, Claimant sustained a disabling work-related injury while operating a broken pallet jack. Reproduced Record (R.R.) at 40a & 52a. Employer accepted the injury as a “lower back strain” and began paying temporary total disability (TTD) benefits of $951.00 per week. Id. The parties later stipulated to expand the description of injury to “bilateral pulmonary embolism and bilateral [deep venous thrombosis] as a result of the immobility of the work injury.” Id. After litigation of a review petition, the WCJ issued a January 4, 2018, decision further adding “L4-5 disc herniation, resolved to a disc disruption with chronic right L4 radiculopathy” to the description of injury. Id. at 46a. On September 27, 2019, Employer filed a modification petition seeking to modify Claimant’s benefits to temporary partial disability (TPD) status based on a July 11, 2019, IRE based on the 6th edition of the American Medical Association Guides to the Evaluation of Permanent Impairment (AMA Guides); the IRE returned a 32% impairment rating. R.R. at 8a. This was below the 35% threshold for retention of TTD status as dictated in Section 306(a.3)(2) of the Workers’ Compensation Act (Act),1 which became effective roughly 10 months before the July 2019 IRE. Id. Employer presented the deposition of Dr. Kenneth Gentilezza, M.D., who conducted the July 2019 IRE. R.R. at 47a. At the IRE, Claimant reported 8/10 pain in his lumbar area radiating with radicular symptoms down his right leg and more recently in his left leg. Id. at 53a. Claimant reported ongoing difficulty with all activities of daily living and completed a pain disability questionnaire (PDQ).2 Id. A January 2017 electromyography (EMG) test showed right-side radiculopathy

1 Act of June 2, 1915, P.L. 736, as amended, 77 P.S. §§ 1-1041.4, 2501-2710. Section 306(a.3)(2) was added to the Act by the Act of October 24, 2018, P.L. 714, No. 111 (Act 111), 77 P.S. § 511.3(2). 2 The PDQ was described by Claimant’s medical witness, Dr. Jacob, as a paper evaluation where the patient fills out 15 questions concerning their condition on a 1/10 scale; the doctor then adds up the total and includes it in the impairment rating pursuant to the Guides’ formula. Reproduced Record (R.R.) at 110a. 2 at L4 and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) studies showed abnormalities with stenosis at L3-4 and L4-5. Id. at 54a. Dr. Gentilezza noted that according to records, Claimant reported left leg issues in April 2017, but these were not diagnostically documented and were not included in the WCJ’s description of injury. R.R. at 55a-56a. Dr. Gentilezza omitted left leg symptoms in his IRE calculations because he did not find them to be consistent with or causally related to Claimant’s 2015 injury. Id. at 57a. He explained that in the IRE context, symptoms in another body part can be valid but not necessarily contribute to or enhance impairment. Id. at 61a. Using a combined values chart to determine a final figure based on his raw evaluation scores, Dr. Gentilezza arrived at an overall impairment rating of 32%, which he believed was accurate. Id. at 60a. Dr. Gentilezza explained his methodology for Claimant’s lumbar conditions. R.R. at 58a-59a. Pursuant to the AMA Guides and based on Claimant’s diagnosis, his lumbar issues were within the “Class 3” range of 15-23% impairment; the evaluation begins in the middle at a default of 19% and then is adjusted using modifying factors based on the PDQ, the clinical exam, and medical records including available clinical studies. Id. at 58a. Claimant’s PDQ score was 119, which Dr. Gentilezza described as a Grade 3 modifier indicating pain and symptoms with less than normal activity. Id. His clinical examination, which resulted in findings of diminished light touch sensation and 3/5 strength, resulted in a Grade 2 modifier. Id. Evaluation of Claimant’s medical records, including his diagnostic tests, led to a Grade 3 modifier. Id. Using these results, Dr. Gentilezza calculated that Claimant’s lumbar impairment rating was two negative units off of the 19% default, resulting in a 15% rating (the numbers are “odd,” meaning that his

3 calculations took the rating from 19% to 17% to 15%). Id. at 58a-59a. Relevant to this appeal, Dr. Gentilezza stated that he did not use Table 17-5 from the AMA Guides in Claimant’s IRE; he described it as an “overview” and an “overall guide” to IREs that is part of the AMA Guides, but is “not part of the formula” used to actually calculate ratings. Id. at 63a. Dr. Gentilezza acknowledged the differences between his lumbar calculations and those of Dr. Jacob, who conducted a rebuttal IRE at Claimant’s request and in which Dr. Jacob calculated 21% lumbar impairment based on one positive unit that raised his default from 19% to 21%. R.R. at 59a-60a & 64a. Dr. Gentilezza noted that Dr. Jacob’s figures were generally higher and that he did not see objective evidence in Dr. Jacob’s notes to support some of his results. Id. at 64a. Dr. Gentilezza’s physical examination resulted in a Grade 2 modifier, less severe than Dr. Jacob’s Grade 3 modifier, because he detected less decreased sensation than Dr. Jacob. Id. at 59a. Dr. Gentilezza explained that in terms of evaluating medical records for the third modifier category, he had not used Claimant’s EMG because it had already been used in confirming Claimant’s diagnosis, but he used Claimant’s MRI because he felt it was relevant. Id. Dr. Gentilezza noted that if he had used the PDQ Claimant completed for Dr. Jacobs, which resulted in a score of 132 (Claimant’s PDQ for Dr. Gentilezza was 119), it would only have increased his overall result from 32% to 33%, still under the 35% threshold for retention of TTD status. R.R. at 59a-60a. Claimant presented the deposition of Dr. Emmanuel E. Jacob, M.D. R.R. at 100a. At Claimant’s request, Dr. Jacob conducted an IRE of Claimant on November 19, 2019, about four months after Employer’s IRE. Id. Like Dr. Gentilezza, Dr. Jacob placed Claimant in Class 3 with a range of 15% to 23%

4 impairment. Id. at 112a & 115a-17a. Claimant presented with 8/10 pain levels and his PDQ resulted in a score of 132, which is within the Grade 4 modifier, more severe than Dr. Gentilezza’s Grade 3 modifier based on Claimant’s PDQ score of 119 at the previous IRE. R.R. at 107a & 138a. Dr. Jacob’s lumbar exam resulted in a Grade 3 modifier compared with Dr. Gentilezza’s Grade 2 modifier. Id. at 107a-08a & 179a. Dr. Jacob also reviewed Claimant’s medical records, including a September 2015 MRI and EMGs from October 2015 and July 2017, both of which indicated right L4 lumbar radiculopathy. Id. at 111a. However, Dr. Jacob believed the Grade 2 modifier Dr. Gentilezza used for this category, which reduced Claimant’s impairment rating from the default of 19% to 15%, was incorrect because it utilized studies that had already been used in determining Claimant’s diagnosis. Id. at 121a-22a. Dr. Jacob stated that evaluators are not supposed to “double-dip” and count contributory factors twice in an evaluation. Id.

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J.T. Tedesco v. Kane Freight Lines, Inc. (WCAB), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jt-tedesco-v-kane-freight-lines-inc-wcab-pacommwct-2023.