Injuries that end in amputation rarely happen as a single, clean event. In Reedsburg-area cases, we commonly see the harm develop through a chain:
- an initial trauma (workplace incident, vehicle crash, or severe fall)
- emergency stabilization and surgery
- complications that may worsen over days or weeks (infection, delayed diagnosis, loss of blood flow, nerve damage)
- eventual tissue loss and amputation
That timeline matters legally. The party at fault isn’t always the one connected to the very first injury—it can also be someone responsible for later medical decisions, safety failures, or negligent handling of the situation after the initial event.


