NONPRECEDENTIAL DISPOSITION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 February 27, 2018
Decided March 21, 2018
Before
DIANE P. WOOD, Chief Judge
WILLIAM J. BAUER, Circuit Judge
AMY C. BARRETT, Circuit Judge
No. 17‐2017
KAREN MURPHY, Appeal from the United States District
Plaintiff–Appellant, Court for the Northern District of Illinois,
Eastern Division.
v.
No. 16 C 2366
NANCY A. BERRYHILL, Acting
Commissioner of Social Security, Sidney I. Schenkier,
Defendant–Appellee. Magistrate Judge.
O R D E R
Karen Murphy applied for disability insurance benefits, alleging that a stroke in
April 2007 left her disabled. An administrative law judge awarded Murphy benefits
through November 2008. Murphy challenges the ALJ’s determination that she
experienced medical improvement and could work beginning in December 2008.
Because substantial evidence supports the ALJ’s decision, we affirm the district court’s
judgment upholding that decision.
No. 17‐2017 Page 2
I. BACKGROUND
Murphy’s medical records reflect gradual improvement, so we begin our
discussion of the medical evidence in April 2008—one year into her recovery and
during the period when the ALJ found her disabled. At that time, Murphy’s
neurologist, Dr. Joseph Mayer, opined that she suffered from “very mild aphasia and
some significant loss of sensation.” In particular, on her right (dominant) side Murphy
experienced “waxing and waning paresthesias” (tingling sensations) and decreased
proprioception (the ability to sense one’s body’s position). Murphy’s chief complaint
was headaches, which she experienced almost nightly. Dr. Mayer thought the
headaches were unrelated to her stroke and prescribed gabapentin (a nerve‐pain
medication) and Fioricet (an analgesic).
During a follow‐up appointment in July 2008, Murphy reported that her
headaches “were not as bad,” occurring about twice per week. This improvement had
occurred though she had not taken her medications as prescribed—she had taken
“some occasional Fioricet when over‐the‐counter medication d[id] not help,” but she
had never taken the gabapentin. (Murphy later said that her prescription medications
made her tired.) Dr. Mayer concluded that Murphy’s headaches had “clearly
improved.” He described her speech as “quite fluent” and her overall condition as
“fairly stable.”
Murphy returned to Dr. Mayer in October 2008 with reports of “at least four
headaches per week,” often in the middle of the night. She also expressed frustration
with “the residual effects from her stroke,” noting that the sensation in her right hand
was “still quite bad” and she had “some difficulty with speech,” especially when tired.
Dr. Mayer encouraged Murphy to take her prescribed medications and ordered a
magnetic resonance angiography (“MRA”). This MRA, taken in December 2008,
showed improvement in the degree of stenosis (abnormal narrowing) in Murphy’s
proximal left internal carotid artery. An MRA taken soon after Murphy’s stroke had
shown that the artery was essentially blocked, but the December 2008 MRA showed
only 60% stenosis.
Around this time Murphy was diagnosed with moderate plantar fasciitis
(inflammation of the tissue) in her left heel, which a podiatrist treated with orthotics, a
splint, and one‐time injections of a corticosteroid and an anesthetic.
No. 17‐2017 Page 3
Other than a brief visit to the hospital in January 2009 for chest pain and
shortness of breath, Murphy sought no further treatment until October 2009, when she
visited her primary care doctor with various complaints. She reported having
headaches at least 5 times per week. Fioricet usually helped, though sometimes she took
Excedrin. She also complained of chronic pain in her right arm. Sometimes this was
“more of a sharp pain” and sometimes she also experienced paresthesia, but she could
still “do anything with the arm.” She added, without elaboration, that she sometimes
got confused easily. The doctor prescribed stretches, heat, a muscle relaxant, and an
anti‐inflammatory drug for the headaches. He also told Murphy to consult with her
neurologist if she continued to have headaches, pain in her arm, or episodes of
confusion.
Murphy followed up with Dr. Mayer in December 2009. She complained of
numbness on the right side of her body, headaches, and forgetfulness. Dr. Mayer
assessed Murphy as having “quite fluent” speech, “slightly slower” finger movements
with her right hand than with her left hand, and “moderately diminished”
proprioception in her right hand. Dr. Mayer concluded that Murphy had “made a very
good recovery” overall, though he noted her frustration with “her persistent deficits.”
Murphy applied for disability insurance benefits in September 2008, alleging that
she became disabled the day of her stroke. An ALJ conducted a hearing on her
application in July 2010, and recommended denying her request for benefits. The
Appeals Council adopted this recommendation. Murphy then sought judicial review of
the agency’s decision. She lost in the district court, but this court remanded the case
after concluding that the agency’s decision was not supported by substantial evidence.
See Murphy v. Colvin, 759 F.3d 811 (7th Cir. 2014).
In June 2015 a different ALJ held a second hearing. Murphy, appearing with
counsel, testified mostly about her condition at the end of 2007. She said that by then
she had recovered enough to pick up coins, tie her shoes, and make a fist. But she could
not use her hands, stand, or walk for more than two hours per day, and she had
difficulty communicating. She also had headaches five days per week, lasting at least
eight hours at a time. She did not like taking her prescription medications because they
made her tired, but she “took a lot of Excedrin because [it] seemed to help a lot.”
Murphy acknowledged that her condition had improved since 2007, but she said
that she had never recovered “totally” from the stroke and that her attempts to work
had proven unsuccessful. In 2010 she had tried to work part‐time as a cashier, but could
No. 17‐2017 Page 4
not do the work because of headaches and difficulty standing and counting money.
She had most recently worked in 2013 as a hostess at a casino, but she quit because of
headaches and arm pain.
The parties stipulated that Murphy’s husband would testify as he had at the first
hearing. Of particular significance to this appeal, Murphy’s husband had estimated that
headaches and “constant pain” left Murphy bedridden 12 days per month in 2008 and
7 days per month in 2010.
At the 2015 hearing the ALJ also heard testimony from medical expert Dr. Karl
Manders, a specialist in pain medicine and neurosurgery. The ALJ told Dr. Manders to
focus on the period of April 13, 2007 (the date of Murphy’s stroke) through
December 31, 2007 (her date last insured). Dr. Manders initially estimated that
Murphy’s condition matched Listing 12.02 (organic brain disorders) or 11.04 (vascular
insult to the brain) for 18 to 24 months after her stroke. Then, after reexamining
Dr. Mayer’s treatment notes, Dr. Manders said that Murphy “did not meet a listing”
as of October 31, 2008. Around that time, Dr. Manders opined, Murphy would have had
trouble performing “fine manipulations” with her right hand but would not be limited
in her ability to sit, stand, walk, or speak. He added that Murphy’s headaches were
probably unrelated to her stroke. And when Murphy’s lawyer asked whether a
treatment note from December 2009 suggested that she should be limited to light or
sedentary work, Dr. Manders said that at that time Murphy “probably could do light
activity” because her only neurological problem by then was her proprioception,
“which doesn’t have a lot of impact” on most vocational activities.
A vocational expert also testified about the jobs that would be available to
someone with Murphy’s limitations. The ALJ asked him to consider a claimant who
(subject to limitations for certain postures and work environments) could frequently
handle, finger, and feel with the dominant right arm, with no limitations on the left;
occasionally reach overhead with both arms; and who retained the mental capacity to
perform simple tasks. The vocational expert opined that such a person could perform
light, unskilled work, even if she could never feel her right arm. But such work would
be unavailable if she could finger only occasionally or missed more than one day of
work per month because of headaches.
The ALJ issued a partially favorable decision. She first applied the familiar
five‐step evaluation process for assessing disability in adults, 20 C.F.R. § 404.1520(a)(4).
Here she found that the residual effects of Murphy’s stroke—including her cognitive
No. 17‐2017 Page 5
and communication difficulties—were severe impairments but her plantar fasciitis was
not severe. She concluded that Murphy’s impairments left her disabled after her stroke.
Then, applying the eight‐step process for assessing medical improvement, 20 C.F.R.
§ 404.1594(f), the ALJ determined that Murphy could work beginning December 1, 2008.
In reaching this conclusion, the ALJ discredited Murphy’s and her husband’s testimony
about the extent of her impairments. The ALJ determined that their testimony about
disabling headaches after November 2008 was “not supported by the claimant’s reports
to her physicians or the treatment sought.” She explained that Dr. Mayer’s treatment
notes showed that Murphy made a “very good recovery” and that her headaches were
unrelated to her stroke and largely controlled by over‐the‐counter medication. The ALJ
thus awarded Murphy a period of disability insurance benefits from April 13, 2007,
through November 30, 2008.
Murphy did not seek review from the Appeals Council, making the ALJ’s
decision final. See 20 C.F.R. § 404.984 (authorizing claimant to skip Appeals Council
review when case was previously remanded from federal court). A magistrate judge,
presiding with the parties’ consent, upheld the ALJ’s decision and denied Murphy’s
request for reconsideration. This appeal followed.
II. DISCUSSION
We will affirm if substantial evidence supports the ALJ’s decision, but reverse if
the ALJ ignored significant evidence of disability. See Scrogham v. Colvin, 765 F.3d 685,
695 (7th Cir. 2014). An ALJ must confront evidence that supports the applicant’s claim
and at least “explain why it was rejected before concluding that her impairments did
not impose more than a minimal limitation on her ability to perform basic work tasks.”
Thomas v. Colvin, 826 F.3d 953, 961 (7th Cir. 2016).
We begin with Murphy’s most developed argument: that the ALJ improperly
discredited testimony from Murphy and her husband about the extent of her
impairments after November 2008. Murphy argues that the ALJ erred by relying “solely
on a lack of objective medical evidence to discredit Murphy and her husband.”
And she insists that she “was not required to report the details of her headaches to her
physicians.” But the ALJ’s adverse credibility finding was not based on the absence of
details in her medical records; rather, it was properly based on the incongruity between
the relatively modest symptoms Murphy reported to her doctors and the more severe
symptoms Murphy and her husband reported to the ALJ. See Schmidt v. Barnhart,
395 F.3d 737, 747 (7th Cir. 2005). And while Murphy suggests that her reports to her
No. 17‐2017 Page 6
doctors have no bearing on her husband’s credibility, it was proper for the ALJ to
consider whether Murphy’s husband’s testimony aligns with other evidence in the
record. The ALJ’s adverse credibility finding was not patently wrong. See Gerstner v.
Berryhill, 879 F.3d 257, 264 (7th Cir. 2018).
Moreover, substantial evidence supports the ALJ’s conclusion that Murphy
experienced medical improvement beginning on December 1, 2008. Most significantly,
there is Dr. Manders’s opinion that she “did not meet a listing” by October 31, 2008.
This timeframe also corresponds with a gap in Murphy’s medical records: after the
MRA taken in December 2008, which showed that the blockage in one of Murphy’s
carotid arteries had improved significantly since her stroke, Murphy did not seek
treatment for her headaches or stroke‐related impairments until October 2009.
Murphy’s two remaining arguments fare no better. First, Murphy faults the ALJ
for not discussing a portion of Dr. Manders’s testimony during cross‐examination that,
she says, undermines the date of medical improvement assigned by the ALJ. But
Murphy mischaracterizes Dr. Manders’s testimony. As mentioned above, counsel asked
Dr. Manders to consider whether a treatment note from December 2009 showed that
Murphy should be limited to light or sedentary work. Dr. Manders responded that “late
in 2009 going into 2010 that [sic] she probably could do light activity.” Murphy reads
into this response an opinion that Dr. Manders never expressed—namely, that
“Murphy ceased meeting a listing . . . no earlier than December 21, 2009, and possibly in
2010” (emphasis added). But this interpretation of Dr. Manders’s testimony ignores his
statement on direct examination that Murphy “did not meet a listing” by October 2008.
That counsel asked Dr. Manders to discuss limitations that would have existed in
December 2009 does not undermine Dr. Manders’s earlier‐stated view.
Murphy concludes with an undeveloped argument that the ALJ should have
questioned the vocational expert about additional functional limitations caused by the
plantar fasciitis in her left heel. She does not specify what those limitations should be,
though it appears from her brief that she believes they would include limitations
against standing or walking for long periods. But Murphy’s medical records do not
mention any problems with plantar fasciitis (or any related condition) after October
2008, when a podiatrist treated Murphy’s left heel with orthotics, a splint, and one‐time
injections of a corticosteroid and an anesthetic. And Dr. Manders opined—without
contradiction by any other medical source—that Murphy was not limited in her ability
to sit, stand, or walk, through her date last insured.
No. 17‐2017 Page 7
III. CONCLUSION
Because substantial evidence supports the ALJ’s decision, we AFFIRM the
district court’s judgment upholding that decision.