Filed Date: 5/11/1978
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/1/2024
Appeal from a decision of the Workers’ Compensation Board, filed December 10, 1976, as amended by decision filed August 11, 1977. Claimant suffered a compensable myocardial infarction on April 25, 1972. He returned to work in January, 1973 under doctor’s orders to refrain from heavy exertion. The demands of work gradually increased through August of 1973, at which time he was called on to regularly do the same heavy lifting he had done prior to the infarction of April, 1972. Between January and August of 1973, claimant experienced occasional chest pains, both while at work and at home. The frequency of the pain incidents increased until, on August 29, 1973, claimant suffered five onsets of chest pain while at work. The board has found that claimant suffered an accidental injury on August 29 which, superimposed on pre-existing heart damage (from the April, 1972 infarction) and pre-existing blockage of the coronary arteries, caused the "coronary insufficiency” disabling claimant. The board further held that the accident of August 29 necessitated the coronary artery bypass surgery performed in September, 1974. The appellants contend that there is not substantial evidence to support the conclusion either that an accidental injury occurred on August 29 or that the post-August 29 coronary insufficiency was in any way related to claimant’s work. The medical testimony unanimously indicates that claimant’s fundamental problem was insufficient blood supply to the heart muscle caused by arteriosclerosis (blockage of the arteries feeding the heart muscle). The blockage of these arteries was not work related. The medical experts all also assumed, as do we, that the infarction of April, 1972 was work related in the sense that the exertions of work overtaxed claimant’s deficient coronary blood supply causing an acute ischemia (lack of oxygen) which in turn caused the myocardial infarction (destruction of a portion of the heart muscle). Even though it could be reasonably said that such an infarction is the result of the pre-existing vascular disease and not the work (since a healthy worker would not have been harmed by the exertion), the rule in this State is that "if the actual work done is found to have precipitated the cardiac event which in turn causes disability or death, a sufficient factual relationship may be found between the strain of the work and the result to be deemed an accident within the scope of the Workers’ Compensation Law” (Matter of McCormick v Green Bus Lines; 29 NY2d 246, 248). The question remains whether the disability following claimant’s cessation of work after August 29 may reasonably be attributed to a work-related accident. The doctors testifying for the appellants said that the chest pains experienced with increasing frequency from January to August, 1973 merely reflected the deterioration of claimant’s coronary arteries and not any injury or disease attributable to his work. There had been no new infarction or cardiac "event” in 1973. These doctors (one a cardiologist and the other the surgeon who performed the September, 1974 bypass) further stated the work-related infarction of 1972 did not contribute to the post-August, 1973 disability. The claimant’s doctor, whose testimony provides the only support for the board’s decision, agreed that no new heart damage occurred following the 1972 infarction. But, when asked if the work strain of August, 1973 caused the disability which followed, the doctor replied: "A. [Yes] in the sense that the man had heart failure. That’s why we had to put him on digitalis. He had some heart muscle damage from the very beginning, and therefore, he had the beginning of heart failure. Q. And in your opinion, did the stress of his work aggravate [his previous condition]. A. Yes.” We interpret this to mean