Rodney Mabry v. Arturo Antonini

289 F. App'x 895
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedAugust 13, 2008
Docket07-2122
StatusUnpublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 289 F. App'x 895 (Rodney Mabry v. Arturo Antonini) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rodney Mabry v. Arturo Antonini, 289 F. App'x 895 (6th Cir. 2008).

Opinion

OPINION

COLE, Circuit Judge.

Plaintiff-Appellant Rodney Mabry, a former inmate in the Michigan Department of Corrections (“MDOC”), filed this claim under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against Defendants-Appellees Dr. Arturo Antonini and Dr. Rocco DeMasi, alleging they were deliberately indifferent to his serious medical needs in violation of the Eighth Amendment. At issue in this case is whether the district court properly granted Dr. Antonini and Dr. DeMasi’s motions for summary judgment. Because we conclude that Mabry has failed to show a genuine issue of material fact as to his claimed Eighth Amendment violation, we AFFIRM the judgment of the district court.

I. BACKGROUND

This case involves Rodney Mabry’s medical treatment while an inmate at the Carson City Correctional Facility in Carson City, Michigan. In April 2002, then-23year-old Mabry began a twenty-year sentence for the possession with intent to distribute illegal narcotics. At the time he began his sentence, Mabry had no diagnosed neurological problems, though he had a history of seizures during his childhood.

*897 Those seizures began to resurface while in prison. In May 2002, Mabry experienced his first bout with “blurred vision, dizziness,” and an inability “to keep [his] balance,” which ended with him blacking out and waking “up on the ground.” (Joint Appendix (“JA”) 93-94.) Prison officials treated him with Dilantin and Depakote, anti-seizure medication, which appeared to work until February 18, 2003, when Mabry fell again, hit his head, and was taken to the hospital.

This episode marked the beginning of Mabry’s deteriorating medical condition. Over the next two months, Mabry experienced extreme migraines and dizziness, which ended in hospital visits on both March 4 and 6, 2003. Dr. Daniel Freeman, a neurologist, examined Mabry at this time and diagnosed him with herpetic meningeoncephalitis, an inflammatory disease of the membranes surrounding the brain and spinal cord, caused by the herpes virus. Mabry’s allegations center around the failure of the defendants to diagnose his real condition — neurosarcoidosis 1 — after these trips to the hospital.

The following presents a basic time-line of his treatment during these few months. On April 4, Mabry first saw Defendant-Appellant Dr. Antonini, a contract doctor with the Correctional Medical Services, Inc. (“CMS”), an independent medical services provider for the MDOC. At this appointment, Dr. Antonini performed a complete examination, and noted that Mabry’s seizures and herpes were under control, but that Mabry suffered from hypertension. Both the X-ray and the neurological portion of the exam showed normal functioning, which in Dr. Antonini’s view, ruled out an earlier diagnosis of neurosarcoidosis. Three days later, Dr. Freeman performed an additional neurological examination and offered the same diagnosis as before, herpetic meningeoncephalitis, and asked Mabry to schedule a follow-up exam in two months.

When Mabry complained of similar symptoms shortly thereafter — namely, blurred vision, migraines, and vertigo — Dr. Antonini again examined Mabry and requested a neurological follow-up with Dr. Freeman. Defendant-Appellant Dr. De-Masi, the Regional Medical Director for Utilization Management of CMS, approved this consult and scheduled an appointment for May 5.

*898 Mabry did not receive the neurological follow-up with Dr. Freeman until June 2. The report following this exam opined that “[t]he dizziness is probably the residual of meningeoncephalitis,” the same diagnosis Dr. Freeman offered before. (JA 173.) “Given the unusual nature of th[e] case,” Dr. Freeman ordered a MRI scan of his brain “to make sure there is not a developing lesion such as an abscess.” (Id.) On June 6, Dr. Antonini received this request and immediately filled out a form for a MRI, a possible spinal tap, and a follow-up with Dr. Freeman in a month. Shortly thereafter, Dr. DeMasi approved the request for a MRI, while delaying the request for a neurological consultation in order to first obtain the MRI results.

Only two days later, on June 8, Mabry once again complained of dizziness and blurred vision. Mabry was taken to the hospital, where the attending physician performed a CT scan and urinalysis, which all came back at normal levels. When Mabry next saw Dr. Antonini three days later, Dr. Antonini noted that Mabry exhibited the same symptoms, but attributed his symptoms to his high blood pressure and recovery from encephalitis.

Mabry finally had his MRI on July 17. The report that followed noted “marked improvement of the previously identified parenchymal abnormalities,” “resolution of a majority of the signal changes involving the cerebral hemispheres,” and “no evidence of mass or abscess.” (JA 171.) When Dr. Antonini received the results of Mabry’s MRI, he renewed his request for a neurological consultation, despite the fact that Mabry’s condition had improved. Eight days later, however, Dr. DeMasi decided not to authorize the follow-up exam because the MRI did not reveal an abscess.

Dr. Antonini examined Mabry twice more in August. After the second examination, Dr. Antonini decided to appeal Dr. DeMasi’s earlier denial of a neurological exam, and telephoned CMS directly to obtain a verbal authorization for the neurological consult. Upon receiving this appeal, Dr. DeMasi immediately reversed his earlier decision and authorized the exam.

Unbeknownst to Dr. DeMasi or Dr. Antonini, Dr. Freeman, the neurologist who had earlier seen Mabry, had taken sick leave and was unavailable to provide a neurological consultation. CMS notified Dr. Antonini that it had approved the exam, but that “doctors have not been confirmed for appointments in the time frame of your request, and therefore, approvals for clinic visits are being faxed back without an appointment date.” (JA 315.)

On October 7, Dr. Antonini examined Mabry once again and found that he “continues with progressive weakness with unsteady balance,” making Mabry wheelchair-dependent. He recommended that Mabry’s blood-pressure medication be reevaluated and that he undergo an EKG exam and follow-up in one week. Realizing that Mabry had still yet to receive his neurological examination, Dr. Antonini called CMS once again to recommend an evaluation by a University of Michigan neurologist as soon as possible.

Mabry saw Dr. Antonini for the last time on October 22, complaining of hearing problems in his left ear. Aside from the ear issue, Mabry expressed that he was doing “ok,” that he was taking all medications as prescribed without side effects, and that he was eating well. Dr. Antonini ordered an ear-irrigation to clear some blockage and recommended that he continue his follow-ups, but Mabry never returned.

*899 Finally, on December 29, and only a few days before his parole, Mabry received a neurological follow-up examination. Dr. Umesh Verma conducted a complete exam and found that Mabry had weakness in his right leg, left leg, and left foot, hyperreflexia, and an ataxic gait. He recommended that Mabry obtain a MRI of his brain and spine. During this visit, Mabry told Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
289 F. App'x 895, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rodney-mabry-v-arturo-antonini-ca6-2008.