Cartwright, Asizlee v. Barnhart, Jo Anne , 205 F. App'x 450 ( 2006 )


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  •                            UNPUBLISHED ORDER
    Not to be cited per Circuit Rule 53
    United States Court of Appeals
    For the Seventh Circuit
    Chicago, Illinois 60604
    Argued October 3, 2006
    Decided November 1, 2006
    Before
    Hon. DANIEL A. MANION, Circuit Judge
    Hon. MICHAEL S. KANNE, Circuit Judge
    Hon. DIANE S. SYKES, Circuit Judge
    No. 06-1154
    ASIZLEE CARTWRIGHT,                         Appeal from the United States
    Plaintiff-Appellant,              District Court for the Northern
    District of Illinois, Eastern
    v.                            Division
    JO ANNE B. BARNHART,
    Commissioner of Social Security,            No. 05 C 0685
    Defendant-Appellee.
    Wayne R. Andersen,
    Judge.
    ORDER
    Asizlee Cartwright applied for Disability Insurance Benefits, claiming that
    she was unable to work due to pain in her knees and hands. An administrative law
    judge (“ALJ”) concluded that hand impairments rendered Cartwright disabled as of
    January 22, 2004, but not before. The Appeals Council denied review, and the
    district court upheld the ALJ’s decision. Cartwright appeals. Because substantial
    evidence supports the ALJ’s decision, we affirm.
    No. 06-1154                                                                       Page 2
    I.
    Cartwright is 60 years old. She began working in the mail room at AT&T in
    1978 and stayed with the company for 23 years until she was laid off on March 1,
    2001. Unfortunately, the next day Cartwright fell down some stairs and injured
    both knees, particularly the right. In November 2001 she was hired by Check Free
    but quit after four weeks. In January 2002, she began working for H&R Block as a
    receptionist. She was hired to work part-time, but it soon became a full-time
    position. Cartwright’s job was seasonal, and she left H&R Block when the tax
    season ended on April 15, 2002. She has not worked since.
    In September 2002 Cartwright applied for Disability Insurance Benefits
    claiming that she was disabled as of March 2, 2001, due to “knee surgery, joint
    arthritis, and muscle weakness.” In October 2002 she reported to the Social
    Security Administration (“SSA”) claiming that she also had pain and weakness in
    her hands and arms. In November 2002 a Disability Determination Services
    (“DDS”) examiner reviewed Cartwright’s records and concluded that Cartwright
    had the residual functional capacity to perform sedentary work with a number of
    limitations. For example, the examiner concluded that due to the carpal tunnel
    syndrome, she could perform frequent fine and gross manipulation with her hands,
    but for no more than two-thirds of an eight-hour workday. In March 2003 a second
    DDS examiner echoed these findings after considering additional medical records
    provided by Cartwright. Both DDS examiners (who are physicians) concluded that
    Cartwright was not disabled. The SSA denied Cartwright’s application initially in
    December 2002 and again on reconsideration in March 2003.
    In April 2004 Cartwright had another hearing. The ALJ reviewed
    Cartwright’s medical records and heard testimony from her and a vocational expert.
    The records show that Cartwright underwent an arthroscopic debridement of the
    right knee in August 2001, and a total knee replacement in June 2002. Progress
    notes reflect that she was “doing very well” except for occasional reports of mild
    swelling, stiffness, and weakness in the right knee. The records further indicated
    that in December 2002 Cartwright’s doctor observed that Cartwright was “doing
    quite well, with full range of motion . . . and will be released to full activities.” But
    a month later Cartwright told a different doctor that she was using her cane at all
    times and had difficulty rising from chairs. Over the course of the following year,
    she intermittently reported continued pain and swelling, but x-rays were normal,
    and a January 2003 exam showed normal strength in the lower extremities. In
    January 2004 Cartwright told her treating physician that she was able to get along
    adequately by “taking Bextra, using a hinged knee sleeve and being careful how she
    gets around.”
    No. 06-1154                                                                   Page 3
    Cartwright’s records also show a history of hand pain. In 1998 she
    underwent carpal tunnel release surgery. An EMG performed in January
    2002—just a few weeks before she started at H&R Block—was consistent with
    “moderately severe carpal tunnel syndrome.” On the day of Cartwright’s knee
    replacement surgery, a post-operative examination revealed that although her
    upper-extremity strength was “generally functional,” her grip strength was reduced,
    worse in the right hand than the left. The doctor noted, however, that his ability to
    fully examine Cartwright was limited by the presence of post-operative IVs.
    In July 2002 Cartwright told Dr. Sosenko, a rheumatologist, that the fifth
    finger on her right hand locked occasionally. But testing during this visit showed
    full muscle strength in the upper extremities. About six months later, in January
    2003, Cartwright told Dr. Sosenko that she had some pain in her hands and in her
    right arm. At that visit, the doctor noted that there was “no numbness, no
    tingling.” Dr. Sosenko also reported that Cartwright had full muscle strength in
    the upper extremities both at that visit and at her visit in July 2003.
    On January 22, 2004, Cartwright told Dr. Sosenko that she was experiencing
    pain in her right hand. The doctor noted tenderness and “thickening of the flexor
    tendons,” and tentatively diagnosed flexor tenosynovitis, an inflammation of the
    tendons of the hand and wrist. See Stedman’s Medical Dictionary 1795 (27th ed.
    2000). Cartwright underwent four weeks of physical therapy, but progress notes
    state that she continued to report pain and swelling. In March 2004, Dr. Cohen, a
    hand specialist, recorded that Cartwright had “pretty good range of motion of her
    hands, wrists, and fingers bilaterally,” but had obvious “triggering”—involuntary
    bending of the fingers—in her right and left index fingers and her right middle
    finger. Dr. Cohen diagnosed “stenosing tenosynovitis” involving the triggering
    fingers and “de Quervain’s tenosynovitis involving her left wrist.”
    At the hearing before the ALJ on April 1, 2004, Cartwright testified
    regarding her impairments. Regarding her knee, Cartwright said that she
    alleviated pain and swelling in her right knee by keeping her leg elevated on
    average about 50% of the day. She stated that her orthopedic surgeons and a nurse
    had advised her to elevate her leg, though she did not say when this advice was
    given or when the need to elevate her leg began. At another point in the hearing,
    she acknowledged that when she complained of pain to one of her orthopedic
    surgeons, he told her to “get off the cane, use the knee, get back to [her] old
    routine.”
    Cartwright also testified that she suffered from pain, triggering, and
    weakness in her hands and arms. Her testimony focused on symptoms and
    treatment occurring after Dr. Sosenko had tentatively diagnosed tenosynovitis in
    January 2004 and referred her for physical therapy. Cartwright testified that she
    No. 06-1154                                                                   Page 4
    was taking “a lot” of medicine which caused drowsiness and fatigue for a couple of
    hours each morning, during which time she had difficulty concentrating and
    focusing.
    Cartwright said that she left Check Free in December 2002 because her knee
    was too painful but was then able to work at H&R Block because she could
    alternate between sitting and standing throughout the day. She said that H&R
    Block called her in 2004 to ask her to return, but she was unable to do so because of
    her knee, and because she suffered from stress and depression because of her
    condition. Her hand impairments, she said, were also an obstacle to returning to
    H&R Block.
    A vocational expert testified that a person limited to sedentary work which
    required only occasional balancing, stooping, kneeling, crouching, crawling, and
    climbing ramps or stairs would be able to perform Cartwright’s past work as a
    technical associate and software support clerk even if she needed to alternate
    between sitting and standing every thirty minutes. When asked hypothetically
    whether Cartwright could perform her former work or any work in the national or
    local economy if she had to elevate her legs to stool height, the vocational expert
    said no. The expert also testified that she could not perform her past work if she
    had “limited use of her upper extremities.”
    Ultimately, the ALJ determined that after January 22, 2004—the date on
    which Dr. Sosenko tentatively diagnosed tenosynovitis and referred Cartwright to
    physical therapy—Cartwright was able to use her hands for fine or gross
    manipulations for, at most, one-third of an eight-hour workday. In light of this
    limitation, the ALJ found that Cartwright was disabled as of January 22, 2004. In
    contrast, the ALJ found that Cartwright was not disabled during the period from
    April 16, 2002, until January 22, 2004, because the medical evidence did not
    support finding any limitation on her use of her hands during that period.
    II.
    On appeal Cartwright contends that her hand impairment was disabling as
    of April 16, 2002, and so she is entitled to back benefits from that date through
    January 21, 2004. We will uphold the ALJ’s benefit determination if it is supported
    by substantial evidence. See Young v. Sec’y of Health & Human Servs., 
    957 F.2d 386
    , 388 (7th Cir. 1992). Substantial evidence is what “a reasonable person might
    accept as adequate to support a conclusion,” which may be something less than the
    preponderance of the evidence. 
    Id. at 388-89.
    Cartwright contends that the ALJ failed to give proper weight to the evidence
    presented. Specifically, she notes that during 2002 and 2003 (1) she complained of
    No. 06-1154                                                                   Page 5
    pain and numbness in her hands, (2) a doctor found reduced grip strength in her
    hand and diagnosed arthritis, (3) results of an EMG indicated bilateral carpal
    tunnel syndrome, and (4) DDS examiners found that she was limited to using her
    hands for not more than two-thirds of an eight-hour workday.
    First, Cartwright argues that the ALJ failed to give proper weight to medical
    record reports of hand pain and stiffness in 2002 and 2003. Cartwright complained
    of hand pain during three visits to Dr. Sosenko between April 16, 2002, and
    January 21, 2004. Each visit is discussed in the ALJ’s opinion. But the ALJ
    correctly noted that the records of these visits indicate that Cartwright had “full
    muscle strength in the upper extremities,” no numbness, tingling, or swelling in the
    joints of the hands, and “no symptoms of weakness in the upper extremities.” The
    ALJ was justified in concluding that these intermittent reports of pain were not
    sufficient to establish functional limitation during the contested time period.
    Second, Cartwright insists that the ALJ ignored the fact that a doctor
    “observed weakness in the grip strength[] and diagnosed arthritis.” Cartwright
    attributes this finding to her rheumatologist, Dr. Sosenko, but no record cite
    accompanies this contention in her brief and we are unable to find any such
    observation in Dr. Sosenko’s treatment notes. Dr. Sosenko did document arthritis
    in Cartwright’s right knee in November 2001, and in March and July 2002 she
    documented osteoarthritis—a type of arthritis that mainly affects weight-bearing
    joints like the knee and hip, Stedman’s Medical Dictionary 1282 (27th ed.
    2000)—but apparently never diagnosed arthritis in the hands.
    Perhaps Cartwright intended to reference Dr. Deppe’s record of Cartwright’s
    examination on June 5, 2002, the day she had knee-replacement surgery.
    Dr. Deppe, who apparently examined Cartwright only during her post-operative
    hospitalization, noted “[a]rthritis with right hand weakness” that would be “further
    evaluated.” The record does not direct treatment, testing, or even follow-up, nor
    does it indicate that Cartwright’s apparent arthritis caused any functional
    limitation, although Dr. Deppe suggested that Cartwright might benefit from using
    “adaptive equipment to facilitate opening jars at home, which is difficult for her.”
    Cartwright does not point to any other evidence that she was diagnosed with,
    treated for, or limited by arthritis of the hands before January 2004. See 20 C.F.R.
    § 404.1529(c)(3) (stating that evidence of treatment and of functional limitations
    will be taken into account to evaluate the intensity and persistence of symptoms).
    Cartwright points out that Dr. Heffernan, her primary treating doctor, diagnosed
    arthritis in the right hand and treated her with Naprosyn, but this occurred in
    April and May of 1999, almost three years before Cartwright’s claimed onset date.
    Although the record contains extensive notes from Dr. Heffernan during the
    relevant time period, none mentions arthritis of the hands.
    No. 06-1154                                                                     Page 6
    Third, Cartwright argues that the ALJ’s finding cannot be reconciled with an
    EMG performed on January 10, 2002, which revealed that she suffered from
    moderately severe bilateral carpal tunnel syndrome. However, Cartwright began
    work as a receptionist at H&R Block on January 26, 2002, less than three weeks
    after this test was performed. She worked there until April 15, 2002, leaving only
    because it was a temporary position that ended with the tax season. The job
    required her to write, type, and handle small objects for approximately four hours
    per day. Cartwright did not report that her hand problems troubled her while she
    worked at H&R block. In fact, when given an opportunity to go from a part-time to
    full-time position, Cartwright readily acquiesced to a longer workday. The fact that
    Cartwright engaged in substantial gainful activity after the EMG revealed carpal
    tunnel syndrome undermines the weight which she would assign those test results.
    Finally, Cartwright contends that the ALJ erroneously ignored the DDS
    examiners’ finding that she was limited to no more than frequent fine and gross
    manipulation secondary to bilateral carpal tunnel syndrome. Cartwright failed to
    raise this point before the district court, and thus it is waived. See Schoenfeld v.
    Apfel, 
    237 F.3d 788
    , 793 (7th Cir. 2001). Regardless, the argument is unavailing.
    During the contested time period, the medical records of Cartwright’s treating
    doctors do not include a single mention of an abnormal medical test, course of
    treatment, or functional limitation with respect to her hands. The DDS examiners
    based their opinions on Cartwright’s medical records. As Cartwright herself noted
    before the district court, their opinions are “of limited value as they did not examine
    [her].” The ALJ determined that the medical evidence of record did not support a
    conclusion “that, prior to January 22, 2004, she had limited manipulative ability.”
    That determination was justified given the limited nature of the DDS review and
    the lack of corroborating evidence in the records of Cartwright’s treating doctors
    during the contested time period.
    Cartwright’s second argument is also unsuccessful. She claims that the ALJ
    erred by failing to credit her testimony that she elevated her leg, on average, about
    50% of the day in order to reduce swelling and alleviate pain. Also, she asserts that
    her medication caused her to suffer fatigue. Cartwright’s testimony on these two
    points established only that she had these problems at the time of the hearing in
    April 2004. Cartwright did not testify that she had been elevating her leg or
    suffering from fatigue during the contested time period of April 16, 2002, through
    January 21, 2004. The ALJ found that Cartwright was disabled in April 2004, thus
    Cartwright’s argument that the ALJ “failed to credit” her testimony on these points
    is ill-founded.
    Moreover, the record evidence does not support an inference that Cartwright
    was required to elevate her leg during the contested time period. Where swelling is
    No. 06-1154                                                                   Page 7
    noted in these doctors’ medical records, it is characterized as “mild” and
    “occasional.” Cartwright does not identify—and we were unable to find—a single
    instance in the record where a doctor recommended elevating the leg let alone
    required it. An orthopedic surgeon who handled Cartwright’s follow-up care after
    her knee replacement surgery said Cartwright would be released for “full activities”
    in December 2002, and he urged her to “get off the cane, use the knee, get back to
    [her] old routine.” Neither statement is consistent with requiring her to elevate her
    leg 50% of the day. Thus the ALJ was justified in her conclusion that the record
    evidence did not support finding that Cartwright needed to elevate her leg from
    April 2002 through January 2004.
    The ALJ’s decision demonstrates a thorough familiarity with the medical
    evidence and that evidence substantially supports her findings. Therefore, the
    district court’s judgment upholding the decision of the ALJ is AFFIRMED.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 06-1154

Citation Numbers: 205 F. App'x 450

Judges: Per Curiam

Filed Date: 11/1/2006

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 1/12/2023