           IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA

Edward J. Timcho, Jr.,                 :
                         Petitioner    :
                                       :
            v.                         :   No. 756 C.D. 2015
                                       :   Submitted: November 13, 2015
Workers’ Compensation Appeal           :
Board (City of Philadelphia),          :
                         Respondent    :


BEFORE: HONORABLE BONNIE BRIGANCE LEADBETTER, Judge
        HONORABLE P. KEVIN BROBSON, Judge
        HONORABLE ROCHELLE S. FRIEDMAN, Senior Judge


OPINION NOT REPORTED

MEMORANDUM OPINION
BY JUDGE BROBSON                           FILED: January 27, 2016



            Petitioner Edward Timcho, Jr., (Claimant) petitions for review of an
order of the Workers’ Compensation Appeal Board (Board). The Board affirmed
the decision of Workers’ Compensation Judge Lawrence C. Beck (WCJ Beck),
granting a modification petition filed by the City of Philadelphia (Employer). We
affirm the Board.
            On May 20, 2008, Claimant sustained a work-related injury, which
Employer identified in a Notice of Compensation Payable (NCP), dated
August 6, 2008, as a myocardial infarction. On or about November 11, 2008,
Claimant filed a claim petition, and, on May 27, 2010, WCJ Patricia Bachman
(WCJ Bachman) granted Claimant temporary total disability benefits and described
Claimant’s work injury as a heart attack and residual heart damage.         WCJ
Bachman’s May 2010 decision also denied an earlier modification petition filed by
Employer. On or about August 18, 2011, Employer filed a second modification
petition, seeking to change Claimant’s compensation status from total disability to
partial disability, following an impairment rating evaluation (IRE) indicating that
Claimant’s impairment was less than fifty percent.
               WCJ Beck conducted two hearings, admitting into the record, inter
alia, the IRE report written by the IRE physician, Lance Owen Yarus, D.O., the
deposition testimony of Dr. Yarus, and WCJ Bachman’s May 27, 2010 decision
granting Claimant’s claim petition and denying Employer’s earlier modification
petition. Claimant submitted into evidence only the NCP, a list of litigation costs,
and a fee agreement.
               In his IRE report, Dr. Yarus applied the American Medical
Association’s Guides to the Evaluation of Permanent Impairment, 6 th Edition
(Revised) (Guides).1 Dr. Yarus noted in the IRE report that Claimant’s main
complaint was chest pain:
               He currently indicates that he has a burning and pressure
               sensation in his chest. He has no radiation of pain. The
               timing of his pain is occasional. The context of his pain
               is dependent upon activities. Symptoms are made worse
               with excessive activities. Relief is noted with medication
               and rest. He characterized the pain as coming and going.

       1
            In Protz v. Workers’ Compensation Appeal Board (Derry Area School
District), 124 A.3d 406, (Pa. Cmwlth. 2015), this Court held unconstitutional Section 306(a.2) of
the Workers’ Compensation Act (Act), Act of June 2, 1915, P.L. 736, added by the Act of
June 24, 1996, P.L. 350, 77 P.S. § 511.2, based upon our conclusion that the General Assembly’s
proactive approval for physicians conducting IREs to use versions of the Guides beyond the
Fourth Edition constituted an unconstitutional delegation of legislative authority. Petitioner has
not raised an issue regarding the propriety of Dr. Yarus’s use of a newer edition of the Guides.
Thus, we need not consider the impact of our decision in Protz on this matter.



                                                2
(Reproduced Record (R.R.) at 53a.)               In addition to reviewing workers’
compensation documents, Dr. Yarus also reviewed a report prepared by Nicholas
De Pace, M.D.2 (R.R. at 54a.) Dr. Yarus identified Claimant’s condition as
“[m]yocardial infarction secondary to coronary artery disease status post stent
placement for thrombotic right coronary artery.” (Id.) Dr. Yarus concluded that
“[Claimant] meets the requirements for the definition of maximum medical
improvement [(MMI)] as defined on page 26, subsection 2.5e [of the Guides]. He
has limitations in his activities of daily living. His prognosis is poor.” (Id.) Under
the section of the IRE captioned “impairment rating and rationale,” Dr. Yarus
wrote:
              Chapter #4 [of the Guides], table #4-6 coronary artery
              disease class III “history of documented MI, angina with
              exertion or significant changes to ADLs to prevent
              angina and/or HF (heart failure). NYHA class III with a
              midrange default of 32%. The objective test findings
              place [Claimant] at C. History of no further symptoms
              and physical examination are consistent with class III.
              Therefore, the calculated total whole-person impairment
              percentage is 32%.

(Id.) Additionally, Dr. Yarus wrote:
              It should be noted that [Claimant] did not have any left
              ventricular deficits, congestive heart, or predisposition to
              cardiac arrhythmias. It was stated that he did have
              Crohn’s disease, which would push his cardiac reserve
              and preclude his activities. His activities were not
              precluded on the basis of his cardiac disease solely.


         2
         Employer refers to Dr. De Pace as a “treating physician.” (Respondent’s Brief at 4.)
WCJ Bachman’s decision, however, indicates that Dr. De Pace “examined Claimant at the
request of [Employer].” (R.R. at 60a.) WCJ Bachman’s decision suggests that Dr. De Pace’s
report was the result of his independent medical examination of Claimant. (R.R. at 59a.)



                                             3
(Id.)
             In his testimony, Dr. Yarus reiterated the observations and findings in
his IRE report and explained his methodology, as follows:
             Well, in this type of problem, looking at [Table 4-6 in the
             Guides], there is only one table to assess the whole
             rating. That entailed the history, physical findings, and
             objective test results. This is predicated on the New
             York Heart Association criteria . . . . When I looked at
             the totality of his history, the information in the records,
             and knowing that he had stent placement for a thrombotic
             right coronary artery, I chose Class 3 because it best fits
             all of the parameters that he has as far as his condition . .
             . . [W]e always start out at a mid range default at 32 [in
             Class 3] . . . . In most cases . . . you have factors that
             may alter the default either to the left or to the right. And
             you have two numbers in the default range that you can
             move to. If there’s no reason to move one way or the
             other in the calculation, then you stay at the middle
             default. And that’s what I did here.

(R.R. at 18a-20a.) With regard to testing that had been performed on Claimant
following the placement of the stent, Dr. Yarus indicated that Claimant did not
have any deficits in his left ventricular function, a factor that, if present, would
have potentially caused Dr. Yarus to conclude that Claimant had a higher
impairment percentage. (R.R. at 20a.) Dr. Yarus also noted that Claimant did not
have a predisposition to cardiac arrhythmias, another factor that might have altered
his rating. (Id.)
             On cross-examination, Claimant’s counsel focused on how Dr. Yarus
complied with references in the Guides requiring the use of objective testing.
Dr. Yarus agreed that in performing an impairment rating for a person who has had
coronary artery disease, Section 4.3 of the Guides requires evaluating physicians to
consider objective, diagnostic studies, including stress tests, coronary angiograms,


                                          4
and other related studies. (R.R. at 22a.) Dr. Yarus agreed that the Guides indicate
that a person’s left ventricular function should be determined through testing.
(R.R. at 23a.) Dr. Yarus testified that he did not order such testing, but that
Claimant had had an evaluation for his left ventricular function in 2009. (R.R. at
24a.) Dr. Yarus admitted that the 2009 studies were not performed in proximity to
his IRE, but offered that the “Guide[s] is not specific as to time frame or
assessment. It just says that you have to have an assessment . . . . I was satisfied
that there was one done and ventricular function was intact.” (R.R. at 24a-25a.)
Counsel then asked the following question to which Dr. Yarus responded:
            Q.     Okay. In order to get a completely accurate
            evaluation for impairment rating purposes, would you
            request that one of those studies be performed so that you
            can meet the criteria that are in the guidelines?
            A.     No, I felt I met the criteria, again because a study
            was done. If there was an issue with his function, th[e]n
            other tests would have been done and I would have been
            privy to them, unless they are done and I missed them.

(R.R. at 25a.) Dr. Yarus acknowledged that he did not review results of the tests
that had been conducted, but on re-direct examination, he testified that he reviewed
the report Dr. De Pace generated, which indicated that results from the objective
testing did not show abnormal results. (R.R. 26a-27a.)
            The WCJ found that the 2009 objective tests indicated that Claimant
had normal left ventricular function and that although “[t]here were no studies
performed proximate to Dr. Yarus’ examination . . . no specific time frame is set
forth in the [Guides]. Dr. Yarus was satisfied that the 2009 study was sufficient.”
(Findings of Fact (F.F.) k, l.) The WCJ concluded that Claimant “had reached
maximum medical improvement as of, at least, July 25, 2011,” (Conclusion of Law
(C.L.) d.) and that, “as of July 25, 2011, Claimant’s permanent impairment rating

                                         5
pursuant to the [Guides] is 32%” (C.L. e). Based upon an impairment rating below
fifty percent, the WCJ modified Claimant’s benefits from total to partial disability
status.
               Claimant appealed from the WCJ’s decision to the Board, asserting
that Dr. Yarus’s opinion regarding his impairment rating was insufficient to
support Employer’s modification petition, based upon the fact that Dr. Yarus did
not order objective tests in conducting the IRE. Claimant argued that Dr. Yarus’s
reliance upon tests from 2009 did not comply with the requirements of the Guides,
asserting that testing must be done contemporaneously with an IRE. Claimant also
argued that Dr. Yarus, an orthopedic surgeon, was not qualified to perform an IRE
for a claimant whose injury is related to a cardiac condition. The Board affirmed
the WCJ, concluding that the Guides does not specifically require testing as part of
the IRE process and that the only requirement for physicians conducting IREs is
that he or she be a Commonwealth-licensed physician, certified by an American
Board of Specialties, and be active in clinical practice at least twenty hours per
week.
               Claimant petitions for review of the Board’s order,3 raising the sole
question of whether the Board erred in affirming the WCJ’s decision, because
Dr. Yarus’s IRE did not comply with the Guides. Section 306(a.2) of the Act
provides, in pertinent part, as follows:
               (1) When an employe has received disability
               compensation pursuant to clause (a) for a period of one
               hundred four weeks, unless otherwise agreed to, the

          3
          Our review is limited to considering whether substantial evidence supports necessary
factual findings and whether any error of law or violation of constitutional rights occurred. 2 Pa.
C.S. § 704.



                                                6
            employe shall be required to submit to a medical
            examination which shall be requested by the insurer
            within sixty days upon the expiration of the one hundred
            four weeks to determine the degree of impairment due to
            the compensable injury, if any.          The degree of
            impairment shall be determined based upon an evaluation
            by a physician who is licensed in this Commonwealth
            who is certified by an American Board of Medical
            Specialties approved board or its osteopathic equivalent
            and who is active in clinical practice for at least twenty
            hours per week, chosen by agreement of the parties, or as
            designated by the department, pursuant to the most recent
            edition of the [Guides].
            (2) If such determination results in an impairment rating
            that meets a threshold impairment rating that is equal to
            or greater than fifty percentum impairment under the
            [Guides], the employe shall be presumed to be totally
            disabled and shall continue to receive total disability
            compensation benefits under clause (a).           If such
            determination results in an impairment rating less than
            fifty percentum impairment under the [Guides], the
            employe shall then receive partial disability benefits
            under clause (b) . . . .
            ....
            (6) Upon request of the insurer, the employe shall submit
            to an independent medical examination in accordance
            with the provisions of section 314 to determine the status
            of impairment . . . .

Under Section 306(a.2) of the Act, an insurer/employer bears the burden of
proving that a claimant’s whole person impairment rating is below fifty percent.
Westmoreland Reg’l Hosp. v. Workers’ Comp. Appeal Bd. (Pickford), 29 A.3d 120,
127 n.10 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2011), appeal denied, 42 A.3d 295 (Pa. 2012).
            Under Section 306(a.2) of the Act, in order to be subjected to an IRE,
a claimant’s injury must be deemed to be “permanent.” Combine v. Workers’
Comp. Appeal Bd. (Nat’l Fuel Gas Distrib. Corp.), 954 A.2d 776, 779-80
(Pa. Cmwlth. 2008), appeal denied, 967 A.2d 961 (Pa. 2009). The concept of
                                        7
“permanent” injury for the purposes of Section 306(a.2) of the Act is synonymous
with a claimant’s MMI. Id. Additionally, before an IRE physician may calculate
an impairment rating, the physician must first determine that a claimant has
reached MMI.4 Id.
              Section 2.3c of the Guides recognizes that the “optimal duration for
recovery may vary considerably from days to months,” depending on “the nature
of the underlying pathology.” The Guides provides that “[t]he clinical findings
must indicate that the medical condition is static and well stabilized for the person
to have reached MMI.” Section 2.5e of the Guides defines MMI as
              a status where patients are as good as they are going to be
              from the medical and surgical treatment available to
              them. It can also be conceptualized as a date from which
              further recovery or deterioration is not anticipated,
              although over time (beyond 12 months) there may be
              some expected change. The Guides, however, does not
              permit the rating of future impairment. There can be
              some scenarios with individuals now at MMI but with
              potential for future progression of their disease.

The Guides also provides that
              MMI represents a point in time in the recovery process
              after an injury when further formal medical or surgical
              intervention cannot be expected to improve the
              underlying impairment.        Therefore, MMI is not
              predicated on the elimination of symptoms and/or
              subjective complaints. Also, MMI can be determined if
              recovery has reached the stage where symptoms can be
              expected to remain stable with the passage of time, or can
              be managed with palliative measures that do not alter the


       4
         Under Section 2.3c of the Guides, “[o]nly permanent impairment may be rated
according to the Guides, and only after the status of ‘Maximum Medical Improvement’ (MMI) is
determined.”



                                             8
             underlying impairment substantially, within medical
             probability.

Also, “[MMI] does not preclude the deterioration of a condition that is expected to
occur with the passage of time or as a result of the normal aging process; nor does
it preclude allowance for ongoing follow-up for optimal maintenance of the
medical condition in question.” Id.
             Section 4.3a of the Guides relates to “Coronary Artery Disease” and
provides, in relevant part, as follows:
             4.3a Criteria for Rating Impairment due to Coronary
             Artery Disease
                    ....
             Stress testing, preferably with cardiac imaging
             techniques, serves as the mainstay in evaluating the
             degree of damage and thus impairment due to CAD
             [(Coronary Artery Disease)]. Left ventricular function
             must be determined in these individuals as an objective
             basis for impairment rating. Coronary angiography is
             also included in the impairment classification tables, as it
             enables the quantitative assessment of atherosclerotic
             disease. Newer imaging techniques, such as cardiac MRI
             and CT angiography, also accurately quantify
             atherosclerotic disease and may be used for impairment
             rating purposes.
             Impairment can be markedly altered with treatment
             programs such as cardiac rehabilitation, smoking
             cessation, and compliance with medications. Patients
             often require intervention for their CAD that may be
             percutaneous (ie, percutaneous transluminal coronary
             angioplasty . . . and/or stent placement), or they may
             require coronary artery bypass grafting. Impairment
             ratings should be determined after these procedures have
             been completed and the patient is at MMI, generally 3 to
             6 months later.

(R.R. at 48a-50a (emphasis added).)


                                          9
             Claimant contends that Section 4.3a of the Guides requires IRE
physicians to order tests as part of the IRE process and that such tests must be
conducted contemporaneously with an IRE. Claimant contends that Dr. Yarus
failed to comply with this provision because (1) he did not order such tests as part
of the IRE process; and (2) he admitted that he did not personally assess
Claimant’s left ventricular function, but, rather, relied upon the 2009 report and
tests that had been performed relative to Claimant’s heart attack and the treatment
for his coronary condition.
             Claimant argues that interpreting the Guides to permit IRE physicians
to use stale objective tests as support for an impairment rating makes no sense in
light of the requirement that an IRE physician must first determine that a claimant
has reached MMI. (Petitioner’s Brief at 19-20.) Claimant contends that MMI is
not an issue until after the expiration of the 104-week benefit period (following
which an employer first may request an IRE) and that it is illogical to permit the
use of tests that have been performed before the determination of MMI becomes
relevant to the IRE process. Claimant suggests that under Section 4.3c of the
Guides, testing of left ventricular functioning must be done contemporaneously
with an IRE, “[o]therwise, IRE doctors, as in this case, would be able to rely on
stale diagnostic testing and results when attempting to . . . determine an accurate
and current impairment rating.” (Petition for Review at 8.) Based upon these
arguments, Claimant contends that Dr. Yarus’s opinion is not competent to support
his impairment rating and that the Board erred in concluding that Dr. Yarus’s
opinion was sufficient to support the WCJ’s decision to grant the modification
petition.




                                        10
             We conclude that the Board did not err.         Claimant is correct in
pointing out that our General Assembly, by imposing upon employers a 104-week
“waiting period,” Combine, 954 A.2d at 780, reflected a concern (also contained in
the Guides) “that impairment should not be considered permanent, which is
synonymous with MMI, until a reasonable time has passed for healing or recovery
to occur.” Id. Thus, this Court has reinforced the notion that a claimant must have
reached MMI—a status where a condition is deemed to be permanent and static,
and not likely to improve, before a physician may render an opinion regarding the
degree of whole person permanent impairment. We do not agree with Claimant’s
argument, however, that the timing of the testing in this case negates the reliability
of such testing for the purpose of the IRE impairment rating in this matter.
             Contrary to Claimant’s arguments, the final sentence of Section 4.3a
of the Guides supports the Board’s reasoning, because it recognizes that physicians
may render an impairment rating “generally three to six months” following
treatments for and intervention with regard to a claimant’s work-related condition.
Although Section 306(a.2) of the Act prohibits employers from requesting IREs
within the first 104 weeks following a work-related injury, the Act does not
prohibit the use of tests that may have been performed within that time period.
             In this case, it appears that: (1) Claimant had catheterization and
stents implanted at the time of his hospitalization in 2008; and (2) Dr. De Pace
reached a determination in 2009 (for the purpose of the earlier modification
petition Employer filed), based upon an electrocardiogram, that Claimant’s left
ventricular function was intact notwithstanding Claimant’s work-related injury.
That evaluation occurred more than three-to-six months after Claimant’s 2008
injury and treatment for his cardiac condition.


                                         11
             Dr. Yarus testified that he determined that Claimant had reached MMI
based upon the criteria set forth in Section 2.5e of the Guides and because
Claimant had limitations on daily activities and a poor prognosis. (R.R. at 17a.)
Claimant has not challenged that determination. Thus, Dr. Yarus did not reach a
determination concerning Claimant’s impairment rating until after he determined
in the IRE that Claimant had reached MMI.
             As the Board noted, Section 4.3a of the Guides does not contain a
directive regarding the necessity to perform objective tests in the process of
conducting an IRE and does not include any direction regarding the timing of such
tests. Although it is clear that objective tests are necessary in order to comply with
the requirement to evaluate left ventricular functioning, the Guides are silent as to
when testing should be done relative to an IRE impairment rating. The second
quoted paragraph of Section 4.3a of the Guides emphasizes the notion that
treatment may have a marked effect on impairment. In this case, it is clear that
Claimant had a stent placed and was prescribed Coumadin therapy, which
Dr. Yarus recognized Claimant did not tolerate at high doses, stopped smoking,
and his treating physician has apparently prescribed various medications.          In
accordance with the recommendations and directives set forth in Section 4.3a of
the Guides, testing is appropriate at a period of time generally three to six months
after treatment has occurred. The Guides places no other timing limitations on the
performance of tests used to determine an impairment rating. Thus, we conclude
that Dr. Yarus’s reliance upon the report of Dr. De Pace and the testing performed
in 2009 complied with Section 4.3a of the Guides.
             Claimant also argues that the Board erred in concluding that
Dr. Yarus, an orthopedic specialist, was not qualified under Section 306(a.2) of the


                                         12
Act to perform an IRE on a claimant whose injury is related to a cardiac condition.
This Court recently held that the question of whether a physician is qualified to
perform an IRE is governed by the Act. IA Constr. v. Workers’ Comp. Appeal Bd.
(Rhodes), 110 A.3d 1096, 1102 (Pa. Cmwlth.), appeal granted on different
grounds, 121 A.3d 981 (Pa. 2015). A WCJ may not impose greater qualifications
than those set forth in the Act. Id. Here, there is no dispute that Dr. Yarus
satisfied the statutory standards to be qualified as an IRE physician. Consequently,
we find no merit in Claimant’s argument to the contrary.
            Accordingly, we affirm the Board’s order.




                                P. KEVIN BROBSON, Judge




                                        13
           IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA

Edward J. Timcho, Jr.,                  :
                         Petitioner     :
                                        :
            v.                          :   No. 756 C.D. 2015
                                        :
Workers’ Compensation Appeal            :
Board (City of Philadelphia),           :
                         Respondent     :


                                      ORDER


            AND NOW, this 27th day of January, 2016, the order of the Workers’
Compensation Appeal Board is AFFIRMED.




                               P. KEVIN BROBSON, Judge
