The Connection Between Movement Disorders and Trauma

The Connection Between Movement Disorders and Trauma

Movement-Disorders-and-TraumaMuch attention has been devoted to concussion and related forms of brain trauma that produce symptoms such as headaches, memory difficulties, and pain in various parts of the body. A little known but very problematic consequence of a brain injury is that of a movement disorder. This malady is an all-encompassing term that refers to a constellation of neurological issues that cause involuntary or voluntary movements or abnormal positioning of a body part. Examples include tics, tremors, dystonia, chorea, Parkinson’s disease, paroxysmal dyskinesias and other forms of hyperkinesias.

A plethora of court cases exist involving movement disorders but most focus on a specific problem like Parkinson’s disease or dystonia. These lawsuits include obvious issues such as the failure to diagnose or properly treat the patient, Social Security disability and worker’s compensation benefits, and whether trauma can aggravate the condition. The more creative cases involve whether medication or vaccines can cause or exacerbate movement disorders, off label use of medication, abnormal movements causing handwriting and forgery issues and whether welding fumes play a role in the development of Parkinson’s disease. This article will begin with an overview of the settings in which movement disorders have been litigated. It will then focus on trauma and its relationship to a specific problem such as dystonia or tics.

MOVEMENT DISORDERS

The Supreme Court of the United States has entertained movement disorders in the context of whether companies that sell generic drugs can be sued for their failure to provide warnings that differ from the labels provided by the brand name manufacturers. One such case involved the taking of a generic drug for heartburn that allegedly caused a movement disorder. The court rejected the lawsuits and held that federal law preempted the claims and the defendants did not have to provide labeling that differed from the brand name label approved by the FDA.

On the other hand, a $20 million settlement was reached in a dispute involving the off-labeling promotion of Xyrem, a medication approved by the FDA for the treatment of day time sleepiness. The company admitted that it improperly promoted the medication for the care of movement disorders, including Parkinson’s disease, even though that use had not been approved by the government. Another lawsuit involved Prozac and Lithium. The facts show that a woman was being treated for a bipolar disorder and had been given Lithium. Subsequently, the treating physician prescribed Prozac. The plaintiff then began having trouble walking and developed seizures. She was hospitalized and diagnosed with a permanent drug-induced movement disorder caused by the mixture of the two drugs. Both the prescribing psychiatrist and drug manufactures were sued. It was alleged that the doctor was negligent in not properly monitoring his patient and the drug manufacturers were sued for failing to warn of the dangers of combining the medications. The doctor asserted that he had no duty to monitor the patient and that her movement disorder was psychogenic and not drug induced. The drugs companies jointly settled their liability for $200,000 and a defense verdict was entered on behalf of the psychiatrist.

A car accident was the backdrop for the denial of a claim for medical benefits in Nail v. Farmers Insurance Exchange. The plaintiff was rear ended while stopped at a light and was diagnosed with a movement disorder involving the basal ganglia. The matter proceeded to trial and the plaintiff was awarded more than $60,000 in allowable medical expenses. The court, however, denied the plaintiff’s request for attorney’s fees based upon the testimony of the IME physician who stated that he “observed several inconsistencies in the plaintiff’s test performance” and that she had “multiple indicators that non-neurological factors had significant bearings on these results.”

In Kraft v. Colvin, a claim for Social Security disability benefits was advanced as the results of the claimant’s difficulty speaking and involuntary movements. The Administrative Law Judge found that Kraft suffered from a psychogenic movement disorder that involved spasms, shaking and jerking of different body parts as well as balance issues. The problem was that there was no physical reason for her abnormal movements and they were generally considered stress related. Her claim was denied and Kraft appealed, claiming that the judge improperly concluded that “psychogenic” is the same thing as “malingering” and she was able to control her symptoms. The court relied upon the opinion of a doctor in rejecting the claim who noted that Kraft showed evidence of embellishment. The plaintiff countered by arguing that her symptoms may have a psychological basis but her somatic complaints were not intentional or under her control. The court on appeal rejected these arguments and stated that there is no evidence that the trial judge rejected the idea that the symptoms could be psychological. To the contrary, the ALJ found that there was a psychological component to her symptoms that were aggravated by stress. The judge was also entitled to discount the plaintiff’s testimony based upon the doctor’s opinion that she was embellishing her symptoms. However, the appellate court reversed the denial of benefits because the ALJ failed to consider the doctor’s testimony that the claimant had a serious impairment as the result of her pain, depression and physical limitations. It was noted that the trial judge could not rely on one portion of the physician’s testimony while ignoring other critical parts.

The following is a discussion of relevant court cases by specific movement disorders.

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SAMUEL D. HODGE, JR.

is a professor at Temple University where he teaches both law and anatomy. He is a national speaker, has authored more than 160 articles in medical and legal journals, and has written six medical/legal texts. He also enjoys an AV preeminent rating and has been named a top lawyer in Pennsylvania on multiple occasions. He may be reached at www.samhodge.com.

SCOTUS Turns A Blind Eye to Law Student’s Plight

SCOTUS Turns A Blind Eye to Law Student’s Plight

Remember the logic portion of the LSAT? It included logic games, most of which — as every LSAT Prep company will tell you — need to be resolved using diagramming techniques. In other words, in order to solve the problem, you need to be able to draw pictures and arrows and boxes, and arrange the objects in the problem in a certain way. Such visual orientation is near-impossible for a person who is unable to visualize, i.e., who is blind.  This testing requirement thus gives the visually able an unfair advantage over blind test-takers.

Koert Wehberg, a blind staff attorney for Disability Rights Pennsylvania, noted:

When I started studying for the LSAT, I found it astonishing that the test directions, as I recall, literally tell you that it would help you to draw a diagram to help with the logic games portion of the exam. I wondered how I was supposed to do that. I ended up submitting an addendum to my law school applications explaining my disability and why I did not do well on that part of the test.

Does it strike you as unfair that a blind student is expected to perform these logic games on par with his visually-abled peers? Is it more than unfair, perhaps rising to the level of discrimination?

Enter Angelo Binno and Richard Bernstein. The former is a blind Michigan student who was rejected from several law schools after receiving a low LSAT score. The latter is the only blind Justice ever to serve on the Michigan Supreme Court. Binno asked Bernstein to be his lawyer in a case against the American Bar Association (ABA), whose ABA Standard 503 requires law schools use a “valid and reliable admission test” if they are using a test other than the LSAT. To wit, the LSAT is the only examination that has the ABA’s stamp of approval. The lawsuit alleged that Standard 503 pressures law schools to rely exclusively on LSAT scores, out of fear of losing accreditation.

In their amicus brief, State Attorneys General from Michigan and Ohio stated:

[B]lind and visually impaired residents in every State are currently inhibited from obtaining a legal education, and the ABA has the power to remedy that problem. . . . It is important to give talented individuals access to a legal education. . . . Yet the ABA is choosing instead to close the doors to legal education for the blind.

The ABA argued — and all courts up through, and including, the Sixth Circuit agreed — that it cannot be held liable for any alleged discrimination because it neither requires, nor controls the content of, the LSAT. On March 27, 2017, the Supreme Court of the United States denied certiorari.

So the discrimination continues. And blind justice in this case is clearly not justice for the blind.

Packingham v. North Carolina: A New (Digital) Age for SCOTUS

Packingham v. North Carolina: A New (Digital) Age for SCOTUS

“God is Good!” Lester Packingham posted on Facebook, celebrating the dismissal of a traffic ticket. As soon as a Durham police officer saw that post, he arrested Packingham. The crime? Packingham was a registered sex offender and, in North Carolina, registered sex offenders may not access any internet website that could facilitate communication between the sex offender and a minor (Section 202.5).

Packingham moved to dismiss the charge against him on First Amendment grounds. The case made its way up to the North Carolina Supreme Court which held that Section 202.5 passed constitutional muster. The United States Supreme Court of the United States granted writ of certiorari and heard oral arguments on February 27, 2017.

During oral argument, the following theses were posted:

THE LAW IS CONSTITUTIONAL

  1. Sex offenders subject to the law have other informational resources, like podcasts, blogs, and the New York Times.
  2. There was a 1992 case in which SCOTUS upheld a Tennessee law that imposed a ban on soliciting votes or distributing campaign materials within 100 feet of a polling place; the court ruled that the ban served the state’s interest in protecting voting rights of its citizens.
  3. State laws that take away the right of felons to vote or own guns have been upheld as constitutional.

THE LAW IS UNCONSTITUTIONAL

  1. Social media sites are used universally for communications, information, political speech.
  2. Would-be criminals can use the internet for almost any criminal endeavor, including finding a bank to rob.
  3. The state should not be able to silence individuals unless there is a “clear and present danger.”

Most notably, many justices showed their respect for social media:

  • Justice Ginsburg called social media “a very large part of the marketplace of ideas,” in which not only do people speak but also receive information.
  • Calling it “a crucially important channel of political communication,” Justice Kagan noted that in addition to Trump, all 50 governors, all 100 U.S. Senators, and all members of the House of Representatives have Twitter accounts.
  • Justice Kennedy said that social media are “greater than the communication you could have ever had, even in the paradigm of a public square.”

Perhaps this unequivocal acceptance of social media and the value it plays in the wide marketplace of ideas on SCOTUS’ part is indicative of the side of which the Court will come down this summer. One thing is certain: the opinion will be historic in that it will mark the first time that SCOTUS examines social media in full and opines as to how much First Amendment protection it deserves.