Many fracture cases in Frisco involve traffic patterns people know well: rush-hour congestion, left-turn conflicts, sudden lane changes, and drivers who underestimate stopping distances. After a collision, insurers sometimes argue the fracture doesn’t match the crash, or they claim the injury was minor and healed quickly.
The reality is that fractures can be underappreciated at first. A wrist, ankle, or rib injury may look “manageable” right up until imaging confirms the break—or until swelling and pain reveal a more serious orthopedic problem.
A strong case often depends on connecting three things:
- The incident mechanics (how the crash or impact happened)
- The medical findings (imaging and diagnosis)
- The timeline (when symptoms started and how treatment progressed)


