*775 OPINION
This is an appeal from a district court order reversing an administrative determination of ineligibility for state industrial insurance benefits. Appellant State Industrial Insurance System (SIIS) contends that the evidence was insufficient to support respondent Kelly’s claim that, as the result of an industrial injury, he suffers a symptomatic condition requiring surgery which is compensable by SIIS. We disagree.
Since birth, Kelly has had an umbilical hernia or “hole” in his abdominal wall. Until his industrial accident, however, Kelly’s hernia had been asymptomatic or non-protrusive. While lifting a heavy sliding glass door at work, Kelly felt a sharp pain in his abdomen; and a bulge protruded from his belly, rendering his previously asymptomatic condition symptomatic. Although emergency room treatment (paid for by SIIS) reduced the bulge momentarily, the hernia reappeared soon thereafter and still protrudes at present. We therefore find SIIS’s contention that compensated treatment returned Kelly to his pre-injury condition to be meritless.
Whether industrial aggravation of a congenital defect which rendered an asymptomatic condition symptomatic is compensable is a question of first impression in Nevada. We have, however, recognized the principle that “preexisting illness normally will not bar a claim if the employment aggravates, accelerates or combines with the disease process to trigger disability or death.” Spencer v. Harrah’s, Inc.,
We have determined that Kelly has met that burden in the instant case. The fact that industrial aggravation may have been but one of several causes producing the symptomatic condition is of no moment. “An industrially related accident does not have to be the cause of the injury or death,
but merely a cause.
If the job is said to precipitate or accelerate the condition, a causal connection with the work can be found.” Harbor Insurance Company v. Industrial Commission,
Affirmed.
