Lindeken v. Lowden

295 N.W. 112, 229 Iowa 645
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedDecember 10, 1940
DocketNo. 45427.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 295 N.W. 112 (Lindeken v. Lowden) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lindeken v. Lowden, 295 N.W. 112, 229 Iowa 645 (iowa 1940).

Opinion

Bliss, J.

Theodore E. Lindeken, the husband of the claimant, was a boilermaker who had been in the employ of the de *646 fendant company for about 12 years. At tbe time of his injury, he lacked a few months of being 62 years old. He was about 5 feet 6 inches tall and weighed approximately 165 pounds. He had never lost any time from his work because of physical disability. His work was rather strenuous and required the use of considerable physical effort. He was in apparent good health on the day of his injury and at all times prior thereto. About five months before that day, he had been physically examined by a doctor for life insurance and was accepted. About midafternoon of October 16, 1937, he was replacing some stay bolts in the firebox of a locomotive, when, because of being thrown off balance by the operation of the implement he was using, he' fell and struck his left knee on the grates and received a comminuted fracture of the knee cap with some tearing of the quadriceps tendon fastening the muscles of the front upper leg to the knee cap. He was at once taken to St. Lukes Hospital in Cedar Rapids, where he was placed under the care of Dr. Ruml, the local surgeon of the railroad company. X-rays were taken, the knee was bandaged with a figure eight bandage, and a posterior splint was put on. No cast was ever placed on the leg. He was then placed on a fracture bed and a weight extension was applied to the-foot. From day to day until the late afternoon of October 30th, nothing appeared out of the ordinary in his condition. His recovery appeared to be progressing normally. His blood pressure, temperature, respiration, and pulse appeared to be approximately normal for one of his age lying at rest. His pulse, however, varied from 50, 54, 60, 62, 64, 68, 72 to 80. Occasionally when the bandage was changed, he complained some of its being tight, but this discomfort would pass away. The bandage was changed at 10 a. m. of October 30th, and for a time he spoke of a “thumping” feeling in his leg, but he did not ask that it be changed, and this sensation apparently disappeared. When callers came and at meal time, he was raised to a semi-sitting position by the mechanical operation of the bed. At 4:57 o’clock in the afternoon of October 30th, while he was eating from a tray, he was observed by another patient in the room to drop his fork, his head fall forward, and to not respond when spoken to. Hospital attendants and doctors were called. His face -became cyanotic and he gasped for breath. His pulse which was at 80 at 3 o’clock was *647 100 at about 5 o’clock, although fairly regular. He complained repeatedly of severe pain about 10 or 12 inches below his chin. Heart stimulants were given and oxygen administered through a nasal catheter. • At 5:40 o’clock his pulse was 128, and thereafter it was á flutter and impossible to count. He was conscious and talked and recognized members of his family until shortly before ■his death at 6:05 o ’clock that afternoon. His body was taken to the mortuary and the embalming process was begun. The blood was forcibly withdrawn from the circulatory system through the veins by a suction pump, and the embalming fluid was forcibly injected into the circulatory system through the arteries. An autopsy having been requested by Dr. Ruml, and consented to by the family, the work of embalming was stopped and no embalming fluid was injected into the abdominal cavities. The next morning at 9 a. m., a necropsy of the organs of the chest and abdomen was performed by Dr. Mulsow, a competent pathologist. Dr. Ruml, two internes and a doctor friend of the family were present. No examination was made of the brain. The report of the autopsy, and Dr. Mulsow’s testimony shows that no tumor masses or emboli (blood clots) were found in the larger vessels; the heart was large and weighed 410 grams, or about one-third heavier than for a man of his size; there was moderate fatty arteriosclerosis of the orifice of the left coronary artery, with a marked sclerosis of the descending branch of that artery. This branch was very tortuous and the thickening of the walls had reduced the opening or channel of the branch to about one fourth its normal caliber or size. There was moderate atherosclerosis of the aorta, and also some sclerosis in the right coronary artery of the heart and its branches, but much less than in the left descending branch on the left side. The organs of the abdomen showed rather negative conditions. The injured knee was examined, and while it was slightly swollen, no thrombosed vessels were found, nor any evidence of a previous thrombosed condition. The coronary arteries, both right and left, branch out of the aorta, and with their branches and capillaries nourish the muscles and tissues of the heart with the purified blood. The left coronary arterial system serves not only the left side of the heart, but also extends into the right side, and the right coronary arterial system serves the right side of the heart, and also gives greater *648 aid to the left coronary system than it receives from the latter. If either system becomes so damaged by sclerosis that it cannot properly serve the heart muscles on its side, nature extends the arterial system from the other side in order to supply with blood the parts that have been deprived of their supply. In fact, nature may clean out the clogged channels or open new channels in order to increase the blood supply to any part of the heart muscle receiving a deficient supply. Such process is referred to, in the record, as “collateral circulation.” It is the testimony of Dr. Glomset, a witness for appellants, that an ordinary lead pencil is a very good average size for an- adult coronary artery, and that sometimes the openings get as small as the lead in a lead pencil, and smaller.

I. The legal questions involved in this case are neither many nor complicated. It is admitted by the appellants, whom we-will refer to as the company, that the initial knee injury arose out of and in the course of the regular employment of the deceased with the company. It is, of course, conceded by the claimant that the sclerotic condition of the left coronary arterial system was not caused by the knee injury. That condition was a progressive one which had its inception, according to the testimony of different doctors, from two to 20 years before. It is conceded by both sides that the direct cause of death was the failure of the heart muscle to function because of a deficient supply of arterial blood. The vital issue in the case, and the one which the claimant must establish by a preponderance of the evidence, is whether the knee injury and its subsequent treatment so contributed to said cause by aggravating and accelerating the heart disability of the deceased as to hasten and bring about his death at a time earlier than it would have occurred without such' injury and treatment. The deputy commissioner in a reopening hearing on the memorandum agreement, which the commissioner treated as an arbitration hearing, found that the claimant had sustained this burden. On a review hearing de novo, the commissioner affirmed the findings and decision of his deputy. On appeal, the district court affirmed the decision of the commissioner. The question for our determination is whether there is sufficient competent evidence of the facts found by the eommis *649 sioner to support and warrant the making of his order and decision, and the affirmance thereof by the order and judgment of the district court.

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Bluebook (online)
295 N.W. 112, 229 Iowa 645, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lindeken-v-lowden-iowa-1940.