                        NONPRECEDENTIAL DISPOSITION
                To be cited only in accordance with Fed. R. App. P. 32.1



                United States Court of Appeals
                                For the Seventh Circuit
                                Chicago, Illinois 60604

                                 Argued April 24, 2018
                                 Decided May 9, 2018

                                        Before

                         WILLIAM J. BAUER, Circuit Judge

                         FRANK H. EASTERBROOK, Circuit Judge

                         MICHAEL S. KANNE, Circuit Judge

No. 17-3022

PATTY ANN FRAZEE,                            Appeal from the United States District
     Plaintiff-Appellant,                    Court for the Northern District of Indiana,
                                             Fort Wayne Division.

      v.                                     No. 1:16-cv-00329-WCL-SLC

NANCY A. BERRYHILL,                          William C. Lee,
Deputy Commissioner for Operations,             Judge.
Social Security Administration,
       Defendant-Appellee.

                                      ORDER

        In 2015, an administrative law judge ended Patty Frazee’s disability-insurance
benefits because she had medically improved since 2009, when she had been granted
benefits because of varicose veins in her leg. The ALJ further concluded that no other
impairment, including Frazee’s osteoarthritis, had become disabling in the interim. The
district court upheld the decision, and we affirm the judgment.

      On September 9, 2009, the Social Security Administration concluded in its initial
review that Frazee was disabled because she met medical listing 4.11A: “[c]hronic
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venous insufficiency of a lower extremity with incompetency or obstruction of the deep
venous system and … [e]xtensive brawny edema … involving at least two-thirds of the
leg.” See 20 C.F.R. Pt. 404, Subpt. P, App. 1, § 4.11A (2015) (emphasis omitted). A
consultative examiner at the time found that Frazee had brawny edema and an open
lesion on her left leg and suffered from chronic bruising and infection. 1 Though Frazee
also suffered from osteoarthritis in 2009, the reviewing physician found Frazee disabled
without considering that impairment.

       The record evidence after 2009, however, centers on Frazee’s osteoarthritis. In
June 2012, Dr. Barry Liechty found Frazee’s knee was tender and could not fully flex or
extend. He diagnosed her with osteoarthritis after an x-ray. Though he considered
recommending that Frazee have her knee replaced, he found she was not a candidate
for surgery because of her obesity and her history of infection and blood clots.

       In December 2012, Dr. David Ringel, a consultative examiner, found that Frazee
exhibited no edema but had a swollen and tender left knee joint. Despite her joint
problems, Frazee had a normal gait and walked at a normal pace and speed without an
assistance device. Frazee showed limited range of motion in her neck, back, and hips
but “full normal range of motion” in her knees, ankles, and arms. She was able to get off
the examining table, stand (but not walk) on her heels and toes, and perform a partial
squat. The agency also received in early 2013 a consultative x-ray that supported
Dr. Liechty’s findings of osteoarthritis and showed mild-to-moderate joint degeneration
in Frazee’s left knee.

       Based on Dr. Liechty’s report, Dr. Ringel’s examination, and the consultative
x-ray, reviewing physician Dr. J. Sands concluded that Frazee could stand or walk
6 hours in a work day, occasionally lift or carry 20 pounds, and frequently lift
10 pounds. But Frazee’s conditions meant she could only occasionally climb, balance,
stoop, kneel, crouch, or crawl and could never use a ladder, rope, or scaffold. A second
reviewing physician, Dr. B. Whitley, concurred based on the same evidence.
Dr. Whitley also cited Frazee’s comments to an agency employee that she had been


       1“Brawny edema is swelling that is usually dense and feels firm due to the
presence of increased connective tissue.” 20 C.F.R. Pt. 404, Subpt. P, App. 1, § 4.00(G)(3)
(emphasis omitted). Brawny edema is contrasted with “pitting edema,” which is
swelling that indents on pressure and does not satisfy a listing. See id.
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working full-time, did not use any assistance devices, and had problems when walking
only long distances.

       Frazee never presented an opinion from a treating physician and included only
sparse records from treating sources. From an urgent care clinic, she provided records
relating to her complaints of swollen legs in May 2013. The doctor diagnosed her with
bilateral edema—though it is not clear if it was brawny or pitting. In her left leg she
exhibited petechiae (small pools of blood in her skin) secondary to her edema, and in
her right knee, effusion. Frazee was told to elevate her left leg for 20 minutes every
4 hours and to wrap her leg in bandages as needed, though the doctor did not say for
how long she would need to take these steps.

       Dr. Terry Shipe was Frazee’s primary care physician until at least June 2013.
Around that time, Dr. Shipe recommended that Frazee visit an orthopedist for an MRI
of her right knee. She missed her appointment, however, and never rescheduled.

        In September 2014, Frazee’s more recent primary care physician, Dr. Dean
Mattox, advised Frazee to visit the emergency room to check for a blood clot in her right
leg, where she was experiencing pain. At the emergency room, the doctor found no
blood clot and concluded that Frazee’s pain came from muscle strain. He had ordered
an MRI and ultrasound, which together revealed that she had a small Baker’s cyst and
led to a diagnosis of osteoarthritis in her right knee based on her “small to moderate
sized joint effusion,” narrowed joint space, and a small chondral fragment (a loose piece
of cartilage) in her knee.

       At her hearing before the ALJ in January 2015, Frazee testified that she had been
using a walker for a year, though she admitted it was never prescribed to her. Frazee
said she could perform only minimal housework: she cooked and did laundry, but had
help with the cooking and needed her husband to lift the laundry basket. She spent
most of her day sitting in a recliner and said she often needed to switch between sitting
and standing with her walker.

       Applying the eight-step process for continuing disability review, see 20 C.F.R.
§ 404.1594, the ALJ concluded that Frazee reached medical improvement as of
February 28, 2013, and was not disabled through the date of decision, March 27, 2015.
The ALJ first found that Frazee did not meet a listed impairment, including listing
4.11A. Because Frazee no longer had any brawny edema, the ALJ also determined that
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she had improved medically as of February 28, 2013, and that this improvement related
to her ability to work.

      The ALJ next ruled that Frazee’s osteoarthritis and morbid obesity (her body
mass index reached the low fifties in 2014) were severe impairments, but Frazee’s other
impairments, including her vascular insufficiency, were non-severe. The ALJ found the
vascular insufficiency non-severe principally because there was no evidence of brawny
edema since February 2013.

       Like both reviewing physicians, the ALJ concluded that Frazee could perform
light work except that she cannot climb ladders, ropes, or scaffolds and can only
occasionally climb ramps and stairs, balance, stoop, kneel, crouch, and crawl. The ALJ
rejected Frazee’s testimony about her own limitations as not credible because it was
unsupported by the objective medical evidence. There was no evidence that her walker
was necessary and her physical examinations were “largely within normal limits.”

       Based on Frazee’s residual functional capacity, the ALJ concluded that Frazee
was not disabled because she was capable of returning to her past work as a press
operator. Alternatively the ALJ found, based on the vocational expert’s testimony, that
Frazee could perform other jobs, including “charge account clerk,” “telephone order
clerk,” or “addresser.”

        Frazee sought review from the Appeals Council, which denied her request. The
district court, likewise, upheld the ALJ’s decision.

       Frazee’s principal argument on appeal is that the ALJ overlooked portions of
Dr. Ringel’s report that reflect deterioration in her range of motion since 2009. To the
contrary, the ALJ explicitly mentioned Frazee’s range-of-motion problems in her review
of the evidence. But more importantly Frazee does not explain why decreased range of
motion in her back, neck, and hips would undermine the ALJ’s decision; she asserts
only that she is less flexible now than she was in 2009. To the extent she insists on that
basis that she has not medically improved, her argument is frivolous. The regulations
provide that a claimant has medically improved in a manner related to her ability to
work if she no longer meets a listing that she had met at the time of the last favorable
decision. 20 C.F.R. § 404.1594(c)(3)(i). Frazee does not dispute that she no longer exhibits
brawny edema sufficient for listing 4.11A, so whether her other impairments may have
worsened since 2009 is irrelevant to her improvement, see id.
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       In any event, substantial evidence supports the ALJ’s decision not to further limit
Frazee’s residual functional capacity based on her range-of-motion deficits. No doctor
ever attributed any limitation in functioning to these deficiencies. Dr. Ringel certainly
did not, as he reported that Frazee could walk normally without any assistance. And
both reviewing physicians relied heavily on Dr. Ringel’s examination notes to conclude
that Frazee could perform light work. The ALJ cannot be faulted for not “playing
doctor” and independently drawing a different conclusion from Dr. Ringel’s tests.
See Moon v. Colvin, 763 F.3d 718, 722 (7th Cir. 2014).

       Finally Frazee contends that the ALJ erred in her analysis of several discrete
pieces of evidence that informed her residual-functional-capacity finding. But the
Commissioner correctly recognizes that Frazee waived all of these arguments by not
adequately presenting them to the district court. See, e.g., Schomas v. Colvin, 732 F.3d 702,
707 (7th Cir. 2013).

        At oral argument, Frazee suggested that she had preserved her contentions by
challenging generally the ALJ’s residual-functional-capacity finding. But we cannot
discern even that broad argument from her brief in the district court. If she did raise the
issue, then it was so undeveloped that it was nevertheless waived. See id. at 708; Puffer
v. Allstate Ins. Co., 675 F.3d 709, 718 (7th Cir. 2012). Instead we, like the district court, see
that she challenged only the ALJ’s weighing of the doctors’ opinions and the ALJ’s
hypothetical questions to the vocational expert. She sought to add more arguments in
her district-court reply brief, but that was too late to avoid waiver, see Fenster v. Tepfer &
Spitz, Ltd., 301 F.3d 851, 859 (7th Cir. 2002). We therefore do not address Frazee’s
contentions further.
                                                                                    AFFIRMED
