In a Lewiston case, the word “catastrophic” isn’t just about how severe the injury looks right now. It’s about whether the harm is likely to create lifelong limitations—such as:
- Traumatic brain injury affecting memory, concentration, or daily decision-making
- Spinal injury involving permanent mobility restrictions
- Major burns or disfigurement requiring ongoing specialized treatment
- Loss of limb or severe orthopedic trauma with future surgeries and therapy
Because catastrophic injuries often evolve over months, the initial medical picture may be incomplete. That’s why your legal strategy should be built around what doctors can support now and what your prognosis may require later.


