Wyvonnia Brooks v. Social Security Administration

430 F. App'x 468
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJuly 15, 2011
Docket09-5924
StatusUnpublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 430 F. App'x 468 (Wyvonnia Brooks v. Social Security Administration) 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
Wyvonnia Brooks v. Social Security Administration, 430 F. App'x 468 (6th Cir. 2011).

Opinion

OPINION

HELENE N. WHITE, Circuit Judge.

Plaintiff-Appellant Wyvonnia Brooks appeals from the district-court order affirming the decision of the Commissioner of Social Security denying Brooks’s claim for disability insurance benefits and supplemental security income. For the reasons set forth below, we REVERSE the judgment of the district court and REMAND to the agency for thorough consideration of the entire record.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

In May 2004, Brooks filed applications for disability insurance benefits and supplemental security income payments for the period beginning December 20, 2003, *470 based on severe carpal tunnel syndrome in both hands and degenerative disc disease in her neck.

A. Medical Records

In September 2003, Brooks was working as a certified nurse technician when she injured herself moving a patient. Brooks was treated at the Baptist Hospital emergency room for pain and numbness in her left shoulder, wrist, and hand. A cervical spine x-ray showed “degenerative changes” at the C5-6 level with “disc space narrowing and anterior osteophyte formation.” Ten days later, Brooks underwent an MRI, which revealed “minimal central posterior disc bulges at C4-5 and C5-6.” The MRI report concluded that Brooks had “[mjinimal spondylotic change at C4-5 and C5-6.”

Although Brooks apparently did not complain about her neck, shoulder, or back to her primary care physician, Dr. Salil Roy, during a December 2003 visit, Brooks had been seeing another physician, Dr. Karl Fournier, during that time for “neck pain and numbness of both upper extremities.” On January 20, 2004, Dr. Fournier noted that “She has not improved very well with her cervical spine. I told her there is no[t] much else we can [do] as far as her neck pain. She is going to have to learn to live with it because there is not enough to do surgery and I decided not to do any discogram of her cervical spine because I do not think she will do well with surgery which might involve up to three levels if we do it because she has degenerative discs in her cervical spine like a lot of people in her age range.”

Dr. Fournier also diagnosed Brooks with carpal tunnel syndrome in both upper extremities, noting (based on nerve conduction studies) that it was more severe on the right side, but that Brooks had more symptoms on the left. Dr. Fournier had Brooks wear splints at night and work “on light duty with no lifting more than 20 pounds, no repetitive twisting, no repetitive bending.” The splints did not work well and in February 2004 Dr. Fournier referred Brooks to a hand-surgery specialist, Dr. Barry Callahan. Dr. Fournier maintained Brooks’s work restrictions.

Dr. Callahan saw Brooks in February 2004. In his physical-exam notes, Dr. Callahan wrote that Brooks had a positive Phalen’s test, positive Tinel’s test, and a positive median-nerve-root-compression test on both her left and right hand and wrist. 1 Dr. Callahan also noted that Brooks was obese. He recommended that Brooks undergo carpal-tunnel release surgery on both sides. In April 2004, Dr. Callahan examined Brooks and again recommended surgical release.

Brooks sought an additional opinion with regard to her symptoms, and saw Dr. Douglas Weikert in May 2004. According to Dr. Weikert’s notes, Brooks reported pain in her left and right arms and discomfort in her back and neck. Dr. Weikert diagnosed her with “bilateral right greater than left, chronic advanced carpal tunnel syndrome” and, like Dr. Callahan, recommended surgical release. Dr. Weikert opined that Brooks’s carpal-tunnel syndrome developed gradually over the years and that her “morbid obesity” was a risk factor in the development of the disease. *471 He restricted Brooks to lifting no more than ten pounds and asked her to limit repetitive pushing and pulling.

Brooks underwent a surgical carpal-tunnel release on her right hand on June 3, 2004, and on her left hand on June 29, 2004. In an August 2004 visit to Dr. Weikert, Brooks complained of left shoulder pain and some locking of her right ring finger, along with “some generalized pain, numbness and tingling in her fingers.” Dr. Weikert noted that Brooks had well-healed incisions, and “good capillary refill, intact light touch sensation, and a negative Phalen’s test in both hands.” Dr. Weikert restricted Brooks to lifting 10 pounds or less occasionally, but noted that “she should be nearing a point where she can work without restrictions soon.”

On September 12, 2004, Dr. Celia Gulbenk, a non-examining medical consultant for the State Disability Determination Services (DDS), assessed Brooks’s physical residual functional capacity (RFC). Dr. Gulbenk listed morbid obesity as her primary diagnosis and carpal-tunnel syndrome as her secondary diagnosis. In the section of the RFC assessment form entitled “Exertional Limitations,” Gulbenk checked boxes denoting that Brooks could 1) occasionally lift and/or carry 50 pounds, 2) frequently lift and/or carry 25 pounds, 3) stand and/or walk about 6 hours in an 8-hour work day, 4) sit about 6 hours in an 8-hour work day, and 5) push and/or pull without limitations. Dr. Gulbenk recommended no postural, environmental, or manipulative limitations. “No manipulative limitations” means Brooks is not limited in 1) reaching in all directions (including overhead), 2) handling, 3) fingering, and 4) feeling. In the section of the form where Dr. Gulbenk was directed to explain how the evidence supports her conclusions, she noted Brooks’s September 2003 MRI as showing minor spondylitis and “no other abnormalities.” Dr. Gulbenk also noted “Severe CTS [carpal-tunnel syndrome], expected to improve to nonsevere by 12 months [after] AOD [alleged onset date]; pain is expected to subside.” Dr. Gulbenk also noted “No evidence of any severe neck D/O [disorder].”

Brooks saw Dr. Weikert on September 20, 2004. He noted that Brooks complained of “intermittent numbness and tingling, wrist pain as well as neck and shoulder pain.” Brooks had a negative elbowflexion test and a negative Phalen’s test. Dr. Weikert ordered a repeat nerve-conduction study and gave Brooks work restrictions limiting any lifting to 20 pounds and limiting grasping and pushing and pulling to less than 50% of the day.

On October 26, 2004, Brooks underwent the repeat nerve-conduction study ordered by Dr. Weikert. In the conclusions section of the report, Dr. Robert Clendenin stated:

Abnormal study. There is electrodiagnostic evidence of moderate carpal tunnel syndrome bilaterally. There is no acute denervation present. The median latencies are much improved on comparison with the pre-op studies. The persistent slowing is most likely a remnant from the previous cts [carpal tunnel syndrome] and not a new acute syndrome. If her symptoms persist repeat median conductions would be useful to rule out a worsening or acute cts.

Brooks next saw Dr. Weikert on November 1, 2004. Dr. Weikert noted that Brooks “is complaining today of some left upper extremity, neck, and shoulder pain.” Dr. Weikert compared Brooks’s pre-surgery nerve study with her October 2004 study: “Preoperatively, her electrical studies revealed a motor latency of 9 on the right and 5 on the left.

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