CLAIM NO. E203268
Before the Arkansas Workers’ Compensation Commission
OPINION FILED JANUARY 11, 1995
Upon review before the FULL COMMISSION in Little Rock, Pulaski County, Arkansas.
Claimant represented by the HONORABLE CONRAD ODOM, Attorney at Law, Fayetteville, Arkansas.
Respondents represented by the HONORABLE GARY WEEKS, Attorney at Law, Fayetteville, Arkansas.
Decision of Administrative Law Judge: Affirmed.
[1] OPINION AND ORDER
[2] The claimant appeals an opinion and order filed by the administrative law judge on March 3, 1994. In that opinion and order, the administrative law judge found that the claimant failed to prove that she was entitled to any permanent disability compensation. After conducting a de novo review of the entire record, we find that the claimant failed to prove by a preponderance of the evidence that she is entitled to any permanent disability compensation. Therefore, we find that the administrative law judge’s decision must be affirmed.
[6] Nevertheless, the claimant again denied telling Dr. Weeks that she was without pain. She admitted telling him that she had driven to Siloam Springs, but she testified that she told him that she had to stop and walk due to low back pain. In this regard, Ms. Rae Suthered, the ergonomics health and safety coordinator for the respondent employer, testified that the claimant told her that she had driven to Siloam Springs and back without pain. [7] The claimant returned to work after she was released by Dr. Weeks, and she continued to work for the respondent employer through April of 1993. In addition to her employment with the respondent employer, she also worked part-time for a laundry from approximately November of 1992 until she terminated her employment with the respondent employer, and she began working for the laundry full time when she terminated her employment with the respondent employer. She testified that her duties at the laundry included doing laundry, ironing, and giving change, and she testified that these duties were less physically strenuous than her duties with the respondent employer. [8] Despite this level of activity, she testified that she experienced low back pain continually from the time of the February 7, 1992, injury. In this regard, she testified that she has experienced low back pain whenever she sits for any length of time since the occurrence of the injury. She also testified that she reported to the plant nurses’ station at least one to two times each week during the approximately 60 weeks that she continued to work for the respondent employer. However, Ms. Suthered testified that the nurse maintains records which reflect every time an employee reports to the nurses’ station, and she testified that she reviewed the records that the nurse maintains which reflect every time an employee reports to the nurses’ station for the period extending from September of 1992 through April of 1993, and she testified that there were no entries indicating that the claimant had ever reported to the nurses’ station. In addition, she testified that she would have been informed if the claimant had reported to the nurses’ station prior to September of 1992, and she did not recall any such reports. [9] The claimant concedes that she did not otherwise seek any medical treatment for her alleged continued problems until June 22, 1993. At that time, she returned to complaining of low back pain which she related to the February 7, 1992, incident. Due to the persistence of the pain described by the claimant, Dr. Weeks referred her to Dr. David Davis, a neurosurgeon. Dr. Davis’ August 4, 1993, report related a history of low back pain which had been present on a daily basis since the occurrence of the February 7, 1992, injury. Dr. Davis’ neurological examination was essentially normal. However, he made the following comments:Ms. Brt said she was without pain and had driven to Siloam Springs over the weekend without pain. She was ready to return to work. Her comments coincided with my physical findings.
[10] Dr. Davis concluded that her low back pain was compatible with a musculoskeletal etiology. However, regarding the relationship of these problems to her compensable injury, he noted that the claimant’s complaints of tingling in her left hip “does not temporally relate to her on-the-job accident. . . .” In addition, he made the following comments:The patient could flex forward fully at the waist so that the low back was at about 90 degrees from vertical. She showed me that this resulted in pain at about the lumbosacral junction extending across the midline bilaterally. Extension to about 30 degrees result in similar pain. Straight-leg raising at 90 degrees on the left resulted in pain at the base of the hip, also present with abduction of the leg. Straight-leg-raising caused no pain on the right.
[11] He also opined that there were no objective abnormalities identified. Nevertheless, he assigned a 5% permanent physical impairment rating due to the claimant’s complaints of pain at the lumbosacral junction with lumbar range of motion. [12] This Commission has a statutory duty to decide the issues before it by determining whether the party having the burden of proof on an issue has established it by a preponderance of the evidence. Ark. Code Ann. § 11-9-704Musculoskeletal low back pain of abrupt onset is reasonably termed lumbar strain. Ninety percent of patients with lumbar strain will have spontaneous resolution over about three months, so it is unusual that her pain is persisting.
JAMES W. DANIEL, Chairman ALLYN C. TATUM, Commissioner
[17] Commissioner Humphrey dissents.44 Ark. 46 Supreme Court of Arkansas. Glenn v. Glenn. November Term, 1884. Headnotes 1.…
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