In the Trenton area, many serious injuries come from traffic patterns near major corridors and busy commuting routes—where hard impacts, sudden braking, and distracted driving are common.
After a crash, insurers may try to reduce the claim by arguing:
- the fracture wasn’t caused by the collision
- the injury was pre-existing or unrelated
- your symptoms don’t match the timeline
Those arguments are often built on gaps in records, incomplete documentation, or misunderstandings about how the injury mechanism relates to what imaging shows.
What to know: a broken bone claim isn’t just “you were hurt.” It’s a story that must connect the incident, the medical diagnosis, and the ongoing impact on your daily routine.


